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TOOELETRANSCRIPT ooele beats Grantsville in SERVING blowout game TOOELE COUNTY See B4 BULLETIN SINCE 1894 TUESDAY August 25, 2015 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 122 No. 25 $1.00 Sales tax revenues see boost by Tim Gillie quarter of 2015 jumped STAFF WRITER by $17 million over the first quarter of 2014 — an A sharp rise in Tooele increase of 12.2 percent. County’s taxable sales for the “An increase in taxable first quarter of 2015 may be an sales, especially in the retail early indicator of a strengthen- sector, generally indicates ing local economy, according to increased spending of dis- economists. posable income,” said Jim An analysis of 15 years of tax- Robson, regional economist able sales data also reveals an with the Utah Department increase that exceeds expec- of Workforce Services. tations based on population The increase may mean growth and inflation. consumers have more con- FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO The amount of taxable sales Sales associate Austin Rowley talks about the features of the Chevy Sonic at Performance in Tooele County for the first SEE TAX PAGE A7 ➤ Automall in Tooele last week. A sharp increase in taxable sales during this year’s first quarter may indicate an improving economy since the recession.

Last week’s smokey skies made county air ‘unhealthy’

by Jessica Henrie monitoring for the Utah Division STAFF WRITER of Air Quality. “This time of year, we would Smoke blowing in from wild- expect to see single-digit partic- fires in California, Washington ulate unless there’s a windstorm and Idaho last week may have or smoke,” he said. made Tooele County air quality According to the EPA Air unhealthy for residents, a state Quality Index, the 24-hour par- official said. ticulate average was measured The Environmental Protection between 17.2 micrograms per Agency classified the air in the cubic meter of air and 36.8 county last week as “unhealthy micrograms per cubic meter of for sensitive groups,” with a air Wednesday through Saturday. higher-than-normal number The highest number of particu- of particulates in the air, said Bo Call, section manager of air SEE SMOKEY PAGE A7 ➤

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Stansbury Park Elementary teacher Kelly Wendt introduces herself to her new first grade class this morning. Today marked the first day of school for the 2015/2016 school year. A summer ends and school begins by Tim Gillie door open and greeted each student with This morning marked the first day of STAFF WRITER a warm smile. school for Stansbury Park Elementary and Inside, teachers met their eager scholars. the other 25 schools in Tooele County School started this morning in Tooele And at 9 a.m. the school’s electronic bell School District. County and the students came in droves. buzzed — and tolled the end of lazy days After the bell rung to start the first day Young students were followed by their of summer. at Stansbury Elementary, students learned parents with even younger children carried Then the hallways emptied. All signs that Stansbury students are known as in arms or pushed in strollers down streets of this morning’s commotion were gone. “superstars” that SHINE. FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO and in hallways. Rejuvenated by the summer break, stu- SHINE is an acronym for: Show respect. At Stansbury Elementary, the principal dents were now ready to hit the books once Smoke from wildfires in California and the Northwest made Tooele County’s air hazy — and unhealthy to breathe — last week. The smoke has created air quality stood outside the school, held the front SEE SCHOOL PAGE A8 ➤ more. issues across the west.

SUN AND MOON SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELE New bus serviceUV INDEXfor Tooele police urge The Sun Rise Set WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY Wednesday 6:50 a.m. 8:11 p.m. Thursday 6:51 a.m. 8:10 p.m. Friday 6:52 a.m. 8:08 p.m. Saturday 6:53 a.m. 8:07 p.m. area starts Monday residents to report Sunday 6:54 a.m. 8:05 p.m. Monday 6:55 a.m. 8:04 p.m. by Steve Howe starts on WAug. Th 31. F Sa Su M Tu Tuesday 6:56 a.m. 8:02 p.m. TooeleThe higher County the AccuWeather.com Mobility UV Index™ The Moon Rise Set STAFF WRITER number, the greater the need for eye and skin and cleanup graffiti Wednesday 5:52 p.m. 3:17 a.m. Managerprotection. Cissy0-2 Morton Low; 3-5 Moderate; said there 6-7 High; 8-10 Thursday 6:39 p.m. 4:21 a.m. A new on-demand bus service will be Very eight High; 11+ possible Extreme stops in Friday 7:23 p.m. 5:30 a.m. Saturday 8:04 p.m. 6:43 a.m. is coming to Tooele County after Grantsville, 11 inALMANAC Tooele and three by Steve Howe still visible in some places on the Sunday 8:43 p.m. 7:56 a.m. the Utah Transit Authority decid- in StansburyStatistics forPark. the week The ending stops August 24.will concrete sidewalks and metal Showers and a heavier Warmer; a t-storm Sunshine and very STAFF WRITER Monday 9:22 p.m. 9:10 a.m. Partly sunny Partly sunny and nice Partly sunny Mostly sunny Temperatures Tuesday 10:01 p.m. 10:23 a.m. t-storm; cooler around in the p.m. warm ed to cancel the mid-day runs on be near high traffic locations signs near the baseball field. its F401 route from Grantsville. like TooeleHigh/Low Applied past week Technology 96/55 Tooele City employees quickly Cases of similar vandalism Full Last New First Normal high/low past week 89/63 78 59 85 59 89 67 92 68 90 69The new82 service59 will be oper-89 59College, Average senior temp centers, past week grocery 73.5 got to work and removed the increase during the long days ated by Tooele County and will stores andNormal other average locationstemp past week that 76.1 majority of graffiti painted on of summer when young people TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER Daily Temperatures High Low Aug 29 Sep 5 Sep 13 Sep 21 be available to all residents. The should drop off riders near their bathrooms and playground are outside later into the day, Shown is Wednesday’s service will be available Monday destination, she said. equipment at Red Delpapa Park Tooele City Police Officer Tanya Forecasts and graphics provided by weather. Temperatures are FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Wednesday’s highs and through Friday between 7 a.m. “They may have to walk a little over the weekend. Turnbow said. AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015 Wednesday night’s lows. and 4 p.m. in Tooele, Grantsville The playground, restrooms and buildings at Red Delpapa/Babe Ruth Park Faded remnants of lewd imag- and Stansbury Park. The service SEE BUS PAGE A6 ➤ were recently vandalized. Tooele Police report that several locations in the es and juvenile profanity were SEE GRAFFITI PAGE A8 ➤ city have been hit by vandals in recent weeks. UTAH WEATHER Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Logan BULLETIN BOARD B6 Grouse 75/50 Wendover PrecipitationAIR QUALITY (in inches) INSIDE Creek 86/62 Knolls Clive WEATHER Lake Point Tuesday CLASSIFIEDS B8 78/50 82/59 80/60 80/62 HOMETOWN B1 Ogden Stansbury Park Good Free rock concert SHS forward is 77/57 Erda 79/60 to benefit Tooele one of the state’s OBITUARIES A6 Vernal Grantsville 78/59 Pine Canyon Wednesday Salt Lake City 73/54 81/60 69/55 OPEN FORUM A4 Tooele 80/59 Bauer Food Bank top scorers 78/59 Last Normal MonthGood Normal Year Normal SPORTS B4 77/59 Tooele Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D Provo Roosevelt 78/59 75/54 See A3 See B4 74/56 See Stockton PollenThursday Index Price complete 78/58 70/56 High Good Nephi forecast Rush Valley 77/54 78/57 Ophir Moderate on A7 73/54 Source:Low www.airquality.utah.gov Delta Manti Absent 81/61 76/52 Green River Tu W Th F Sa Su M 80/60 Dugway Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma Richfield Gold Hill 78/60 80/51 Moab 81/59 RIVERS AND LAKES Hanksville 79/62 Beaver 79/61 Vernon In feet as of 7 a.m. Monday 78/52 Ibapah 77/56 24-hour 85/56 Stage Change Vernon Creek at Vernon 0.95 none Cedar City Blanding South Willow Creek St. George 81/56 76/61 at Grantsville 1.36 none 90/69 Kanab 81/56 Eureka 72/54 Great Salt Lake Elevation at Saltair Boat Harbor 4191.28 A2

A2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN TUESDAY August 25, 2015 Tooele boy struck by car Saturday SR-36 RENEWED released from Salt Lake hospital PROJECT UPDATE by Steve Howe a northbound car, Officer Tanya Tooele City Police. No charges today, Turnbow said drivers need The Utah Department of Turnbow said. The boy was not or citations are expected at this to be extra vigilant for pedestrian Transportation’s reconstruction STAFF WRITER of SR-36 from Stansbury through wearing a helmet and had to time as a result of the collision, and bicycle traffic while using Tooele City continues this week. A Tooele City boy who was be transported by helicopter to Turnbow said. alternate routes to Main Street. Motorists should anticipate struck by a car Saturday evening Primary Children’s Hospital in With construction on Main The Utah Department of delays and some changes in the access is available to the property has been released from the hos- Salt Lake. Street, side streets including Transportation also recom- traffic flow as workers proceed on from a back or side street. pital, according to the Tooele As of Sunday morning, the boy 200 West have seen more traffic, mends parents talk to their chil- several projects. Road crews encountered a con- City Police Department. in the accident had been released increased speed and other haz- dren about taking safe routes to With school back in session, flict with the waterline and storm The 8-year-old boy was rid- from the hospital, Turnbow said. ards, Turnbow said. school and observe pedestrian all motorists are requested to drain pipe while working on the ing his bike near his home in Speed, impairment or dis- “We’re doing what we can in safety tips, like looking both ways pay extra attention while driving east side of the SR-36/600 North the area of 700 North and 200 tracted driving are not consid- regards to extra enforcement,” before crossing the road and during school hours. Parents are intersection. In order to address West around 6 p.m. when he rode ered factors in the accident in the she said. “It’s a problem.” using sidewalks and crosswalks. also asked to remind children to the conflict and complete the work, the east side of this inter- out into traffic and was hit by initial investigation, according to With the school year beginning [email protected] take safety precautions, like using sidewalks and crosswalks and section will be closed through looking both ways before cross- the end of August. During the ing the street. Additionally, all closure, westbound motorists will students walking to Tooele High be unable to enter SR-36 from School are requested to cross SR- 600 North. 36 at Vine Street instead of at 100 Traffic restrictions for this area Developer asks city Two iguanas stolen South or 200 South. include: Stansbury Parkway to 2000 • Northbound and southbound North traffic is reduced to one lane in to annex next phase from Tooele pet store Road crews will continue to each direction. replace damaged or deteriorat- • Westbound motorists will be by Steve Howe the reptile. The pair was worth ing concrete at cross streets unable to enter SR-36 from 600 of Sunset Estates STAFF WRITER more than $2,400, she said. and along the median barrier. North through the end of August. The store’s opening on This work will include daytime • Left turns are prohibited at Two valuable iguanas were Thursday was delayed by the shoulder closures. Beginning 700 North and 600 North. by Jessica Henrie In 2003, the city council stolen from a Tooele pet store police investigation, Walters said. on Monday, Aug. 31, workers 600 North to Utah Avenue approved an annexation of Wednesday night, according to The store’s security cameras had will start to resurface the road. STAFF WRITER During the resurface work, traf- Workers continue to place 30.69 acres, which comprised Tooele City Police. been turned off prior to the rob- fic will be reduced to one lane in pipe for the storm drain in this The Tooele City Council portions of Sunset Estates. The burglary occurred at bery, she said. both directions every night. All area. This work will include open voted Wednesday to approve In January 2015, the council Rockstar Pets on North Main “All the employees are upset,” lanes will be reopened during trenching and the use of heavy the annexation of an addition- approved an additional 5.42 Street, according to police. Walters said. “It’s an invasion of the day. machinery. Driveway access changes will be coordinated with al 10.31 acres into the North acres into the NTSSD. Most Nothing else from the store was safety.” Traffic restrictions for this area Tooele Special Service District. recently, Hallmark Homes stolen. The method of entry from the property owners. Crews will also include: work on sewer line installation The property is Phase 6 of petitioned to annex Phase 6 of Jen Walters, store manager at pet store has not been released, • Portions of the road shoulder throughout this section over the Sunset Estates, located west of Sunset Estates. Rockstar Pets, said a male and police said. The case is still under will be closed as workers progress next three weeks. Mountain West Medical Center The city council passed female iguana were stolen. The investigation by the Tooele City in their concrete work. Traffic restrictions for this area and off 2000 North, said Seana Resolution 2015-36 with a 5-0 male was a Crutchfield Albino Police Department. • Beginning Monday, Aug. include: Westerman, the sales agent for vote on Wednesday. Baker said Iguana, which is a rare morph of [email protected] 31, northbound traffic will be • Northbound and southbound the development. a public hearing is not required reduced to one lane from 7 p.m. traffic is reduced to one lane in “We’re just north of Overlake, for the annexation. He has to 5 a.m. each direction. but we’re not part of Overlake,” already informed the developer • Beginning Monday, Aug. • Left turns are prohibited at she said. what documents are required to 31, southbound traffic will be 500 North, 400 North and Utah Tooele City Attorney Roger finish the annexation process. reduced to one lane from 8 p.m. Avenue. to 7 a.m. Baker said the NTSSD was cre- “There is no more public pro- Utah Avenue to 520 South Railroad viaduct to 1000 North ated to maintain some special cessing. We’re just getting the Construction crews will begin features of the Overlake devel- documents in order,” he said. Construction crews completed installing the storm drain and opment such as parks, street “When you’re just changing the the paving work on Pine Canyon sewer line. The work will include lights, street signs, and special boundaries of a special service Road on Saturday. open trenching and the use landscaping at a roundabout district, it’s pretty straightfor- This week, crews will continue of heavy machinery. Driveway on 2000 North. Maintenance is ward.” installing the new curb and gut- access changes will be coordi- funded by a district tax. [email protected] ter in this area. Workers also nated with property owners. began paving the southbound The east side of the SR-36/Vine lanes. Flaggers will be used Street intersection will close for intermittently to direct traffic as sewer line work Thursday at 7 trucks enter and exit the work a.m. and reopen Friday at 7 p.m. zone during paving. Flaggers will During the closure, westbound Utah colleges prepare also be used at the SR/36-1000 motorists will be unable to enter North intersection on Wednesday SR-36 from Vine Street. from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. as workers remove the asphalt in the south- Traffic restrictions for this area for missionaries bound lanes. include: Traffic restrictions for this area • Northbound and southbound include: traffic is reduced to one lane in each direction. returning to class • Northbound and southbound • Left turns are prohibited at SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah paring for the first wave of return- traffic is reduced to one lane in each direction. Vine Street. colleges and universities are pre- ing Mormons who took advan- • Left turns are prohibited at According to UDOT, the SR-36 tage of the lower age requirement 1280 North and 1000 North. Renewed project is 82 days into for missionaries. construction. Crews are slightly College campuses are likely 1000 North to 600 North behind schedule, but the addi- TOOELE TRANSCRIPT to feel the full force of returned Workers will continue paving tional workers hired appear to BULLETIN missionaries going back to class the road in this area. Flaggers will be expediting the project, said this fall, reported The Salt Lake be used intermittently to direct Tooele Public Works Director Jim ADMINISTRATION traffic as trucks enter and exit the Bolser. All road users are request- Tribune. work zone during paving. Once ed not to move barrels, signs and Scott C. Dunn Publisher The Church of Jesus Christ of Joel J. Dunn Publisher Emeritus paving is complete, traffic will other traffic control devices. If an Latter-day Saints announced in be switched to the northbound adjustment is needed, please call OFFICE 2012 that it was dropping the lanes on new pavement. or text 801-859-3770. Bruce Dunn Controller minimum age for missionaries Beginning on Wednesday, For more information on Chris Evans Office Manager from 21 to 19 for women and crews will remove the asphalt the project, readers can call Vicki Higgins Customer Service from 19 to 18 for men. from the southbound lanes. or text 801-859-3770, email EDITORIAL That small change upended Driveway closures lasting [email protected], visit www.udot. David Bern Editor longstanding Mormon educa- approximately 15 minutes will be utah.gov/go/sr36 or follow Tavin Stucki Sports Editor tional and marriage trends and needed as crews and machinery updates from UDOT on Twitter Darren Vaughan Community News Editor resulted in a surge of 26,000 addi- pass with the milling equipment. @UDOTRegionTwo. Readers can COURTESY OF ROCKSTAR PETS also check in at tooeleonline.com Francie Aufdemorte Photo Editor tional missionaries. Temporary driveways will be immediately reestablished to pro- for breaking news and updates as Tim Gillie Staff Writer It also caused a dramatic A pair of rare albino iguanas was stolen last week from the Tooele store, Rockstar Pets. vide access unless a secondary the road work progresses. Steve Howe Staff Writer enrollment drop in 2013 for Utah Jessica Henrie Staff Writer universities, with young women ADVERTISING rushing to sign up for missions Clayton Dunn Advertising Manager and 18-year-old men joining the OPEN DURING Keith Bird Advertising Sales 19-year-olds already planning to CONSTRUCTION Dianna Bergen Advertising Sales & leave. Classified Advertising But now that tidal wave is MEETTOOWW LAYOUT & DESIGN M returning. HHOO NN John Hamilton Creative Director Jacob Byers, a thin man with Liz Arellano Graphic Artist glasses who left home at 18 for •••• •••• PRODUCTION a mission in San Diego, met his Perry Dunn Pre-press Manager family at the airport Tuesday and Darwin Cook Web Press Manager is now ready for his next life- HAND TOSSED • FRESH BAKED Dan Coats Pre-press Technician changing experience: college. Scott Spence Insert Technician “I can’t imagine it will be too BACK hard,” said Byers, who is heading Family Meal SUBSCRIPTION RATES: to Utah State University. $1.00 per copy; $40 per year delivered by FOR A carrier in Tooele, Grantsville, Erda, Stockton, But schools like USU are still Deal! Lake Point and Stansbury Park, Utah; $45 working out how the change in LIMITED 4 - 1/4 LB CHEESEBURGER per year by mail in Tooele County, Utah; mission rules will impact them. $77 per year by mail in the United States. COMBOS! The university hired Leslie Buxton TIME! OFFICE HOURS: for a new position that involves Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., closed Saturday and Sunday. tracking students who take defer- ments or leaves of absence. CLASSIFIEDS DEADLINE: 4:45 p.m. day prior to publication. That mostly means Mormon missionaries. PUBLIC NOTICES DEADLINE: We Deliver! 4 p.m. day prior to publication. “I was hired to recruit them to COMMUNITY NEWS ITEMS, come back,” Buxton said, “and BULLETIN BOARD, ETC.: make sure their transition back is 2 MEDIUM 3 p.m. day prior to publication. more seamless.” $ 4 for OBITUARY DEADLINE: Jim Mortensen, the assistant 2 TOPPING 10 a.m. day of publication. 15 vice president for enrollment ser- Publication No. (USPS 6179-60) issued vices at USU, worries that female twice a week at Tooele City, Utah. Periodicals missionaries in particular will be $20 postage paid at Tooele, Utah. Published by less likely to finish college. He’s the Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company, Inc., 58 North Main Street, Tooele City, Utah. concerned that they will come 2 LARGE Address all correspondence to P.O. Box 390, home and marry instead. Tooele City, Utah 84074. $ His fear is shared by State 2 TOPPING POSTMASTER: Higher Education Commissioner 20 Send change of address to: Dave Buhler. PO Box 390 Tooele, Utah 84074-0390 “Hopefully, they’ll come back and finish,” Buhler said. “We’re *Expires*Expires 435-882-0050 Fax 435-882-6123 08.31.15 490 N. MAIN, TOOELE • 882-3608 email: [email protected] hopeful. It’s something we’re 2 X-LARGE or visit our web site extension at going to be watching.” Like us on HOURS: Mon - Sat 10 am –10 pm Sunday 11 am – 10 pm www.tooeletranscript.com But he thinks the age limit $ Facebook for exclusive 230 E. MAIN, GRANTSVILLE • 884-4408 Entire contents ©2015 Transcript Bulletin change might actually boost 2 TOPPING 25 weekly specials HOURS: Monday - Sunday 10 am – 10 pm Publishing Company, Inc. All rights graduation rates for men, who reserved. No part of this publication may be won’t need to start college, take Also ... Pizza sold by the slice. reproduced in any form without the written ���facebook.com/AmericanBurgers ��� consent of the managing editor or publisher. two years off and then come back. 230 E MAIN • GRANTSVILLE • 435.884.9999 A3

TUESDAY August 25, 2015 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A3 Concert aims to collect over 5 tons of groceries for food bank Free concert will feature John Waite, other bands and food

by Tim Gillie He recorded “Isn’t it Time,” Tooele City. STAFF WRITER and “Every Time I Think of You,” Marz encourages concert with the Babys. goers to bring blankets and lawn A local businessman will try Waite went on to record as a chairs. and break his own record for the solo artist after the Babys broke Along with the music, Marz largest one-day, one-place food up. has arranged for on-site food ser- drive this weekend. In 1984 Waite’s “Missing You,” vice from Tony’s Smoke Shack, an Danny Marz, owner of Pit Stop reached number one on the Erda-based purveyor of pulled Carwash and Pit Stop Coffee Shop Billboard’s Hot 100 Singles. His pork, ribs and other smoky food & More, will hold his third annual follow-up single, “Tears” was products; Vista Linda Mexican Rockin’ Northern Utah concert a top-10 hit on the Billboard Restaurant in Tooele; and Ed and food drive on Saturday. Mainstream Rock charts. Hansen’s hamburgers and hot “Last year we collected 10,000 Several unnamed Utah-based dogs. Shaved ice will be avail- pounds of food for the Tooele bands will also play at the con- able, Marz said. Food Bank,” he said. “That’s the cert, Marz said. A fenced-off private beer gar- largest amount of food collected While the admission price is den will also be available at the at one location in one day in one bag of food, the family price concert, according to Marz. Utah.” is one “large” bag of food, accord- Sponsors for this year’s Rockin’ This year Marz has invited the ing to Marz. Northern Utah concert and food public to be a part of history “If people will think about it drive are EnergySolutions, Tooele and break last year’s record as he they can spend what they would County, Tooele County Health attempts to collect over 11,000 have spent for a concert ticket on Department, Les Schwab Tires, pounds of food in one day. food for the food bank,” he said. Mountain America Credit Union, The food drive features an out- “We’re doing this to help out our and Grantsville City. door rock concert from 4 p.m. local food bank that really needs “We just want to bring local until 10 p.m. The admission is a help right now to take care of companies together, feed our bag of non-perishable food. people in our community.” neighbors, and have fun,” Marz The concert features John The concert will be held at said. “Everybody come on out Waite, an English-born rock the Pit Stop Car Wash and Pit and be part of making history in musician. Waite was the bassist Stop Coffee Shop & More at 2276 Utah.” FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO and lead vocalist for the group N. 400 East. The location is just [email protected] Lead singer Sebestian Randazzo and guitarist Will Robinson of local band One Way Johnny take the stage of the Let’s Make The Babys. east of SR-36 on the north end of History Concert and Car Show held last year to benefit the Tooele Food Bank. Live Fit starts new programs to get students, teachers more fit

by Jessica Henrie Toohey was reflecting on a about 15 prizes will be awarded just see that they love it, [and be] the Live Fit Coalition website each grams. The schools include: STAFF WRITER month-long exercise program the per school, per quarter. able to sit down and focus better quarter explaining how they tried Copper Canyon Elementary, East coalition has done with elemen- Prizes consist of free passes to after having got their endorphins to promote health in their class- Elementary, Harris Elementary, The Tooele County Live Fit tary schools in the past when she exercise facilities, like an indoor going. … Hopefully, the kids will rooms. A subgroup of the coali- Middle Canyon Elementary, Coalition is implementing new had the idea to create incentives swimming pool, Bounce Town see it and hopefully, teachers will tion will review the entries and Northlake Elementary, Overlake programs at elementary schools for children to exercise through- and laser tag at All-Star Bowling see a difference.” choose three teachers in the dis- Elementary, Settlement Canyon this fall to encourage children to out the year. The old program, and Entertainment. At the end A video posted on www.tooele- trict per quarter to win $100 Visa Elementary, Scholar Academy, develop healthy habits. “Walk More in Four,” encouraged of the year, all entries will be health.org/livefittc/start-the- gift cards, Toohey said. St. Marguerite Catholic School, The programs may also help students to walk or bike to school combined into one drawing for a day-with-play/ provides more “Since I’m a parent and I am in West Elementary, Grantsville students be more ready to learn during September. chance to win a bicycle or scooter. details about the program and the schools a lot, I just see and worry Elementary, Willow Elementary, and improve test scores, coali- The new program, “Start the The coalition provided all prizes research connecting health with that health is not highly promot- Rose Springs Elementary, tion chairwoman Malaena Toohey Day with Play,” encourages stu- to schools that use funding from improved test scores and reading. ed,” she said. “I thought maybe Stansbury Park Elementary and said. dents to exercise before school the Utah Department of Health, “What we’re planning to do, if there was a high enough prize, Anna Smith Elementary. “Research shows kids are more every day throughout the year. Toohey said. and part of it is already in place, is they’d [teachers] be motivated to In addition, at least four of those ready to learn and more able to Students who exercise will be able “The hope of the program, when our kids get here from 8:30 try to implement the ways we’ve schools — East, Middle Canyon, learn and do better on testing and to enter their names in a draw- having them do it during entire to 9:45, our back playground is been teaching them to have a Rose Springs and St. Marguerite reading if they’re healthy,” she ing to win prizes. The drawings year, is it will help change behav- open and there will be a teacher healthy classroom.” — have agreed to pilot a new said. will take place every quarter, and ior,” she said. “Hopefully kids will on duty,” said Principal Jonathan Principal Gina Ruiz of Stansbury afternoon snack program, Toohey Marble of Overlake Elementary. Park Elementary said she liked said. The principal of each school “School doesn’t start until 9, but that the rewards for the Live Fit will allow students who eat school you will see basketball games programs extended to teachers. lunch to keep an uneaten fruit or going, you might see kids talking “I like how it gives teachers a vegetable to eat later. At the same or walking around. You will see reward for activities that they are time, the parents of children who Council OKs steps to further one or two teachers on duty. … already doing with their classes,” bring lunch from home will be The reason we like the Live Fit she said. “Most of our [fourth- to encouraged to pack an extra fruit program is it matches what we’re sixth-grade] teachers have their or vegetable. trying to do in having kids one, get classes walk [or] run a mile each The Live Fit Coalition was clarify duties of city treasurer the blood moving through them day for their structured recess founded in 2012 by the Tooele and two, being able to come in time anyways ... I think adding County Health Department. Its and focus a lot better.” incentives and prizes to anything vision is to promote a “healthy A second program, “Wellness is a win-win.” and safe community for all Tooele and finance director in the Classroom,” will be aimed Fifteen elementary schools, County residents.” It is composed at teachers. Teachers will be able located throughout Tooele entirely of volunteers. by Jessica Henrie erences to the $8,000 expendi- finance director is responsible for to submit a short paragraph on County, will implement the pro- [email protected] STAFF WRITER ture cap to the correct figure of receiving money and accounting $20,000, which is stated in the for it, after which the treasurer Two new city ordinances will “Mayor’s Duties” section of the physically takes the money to update the mayor’s expenditure city code. the bank and ensures there is cap, as well as clarify the duties The second ordinance, num- enough money in each account of the Tooele City treasurer and ber 2015-22, clarifies the duties to pay the city’s bills. finance director. of the city treasurer and the city There have been no problems Tooele City Attorney Roger finance director. with mismanaged funds, he Baker explained that in 2012, “This ordinance will clarify the added. the city council increased the authority of the finance direc- “It’s just housekeeping,” he amount the mayor is authorized tor and the treasurer,” Baker said said. “In the course of my job, to approve without obtaining during a presentation to the city as I go through the code, I come council approval from $8,000 to council on Wednesday. “There across sections that need to be $20,000. At that time, other sec- must be a clear delineation of updated. They were already doing tions of the city code were not duties between the finance direc- it right. The code just needed to changed to reflect that increase. tor and the treasurer so money be updated.” Ordinance 2015-23 would is handled safely and account- Both ordinances were passed authorize Baker to correct the ably.” unanimously by the city council. discrepancies, updating all ref- According to Baker, the city [email protected] World’s largest outdoor retail show stays in Salt Lake City

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — The fies,” Lowery said. runs the show, California-based world’s largest outdoor retail Show officials said they always Emerald Expositions, prefers to show is staying in Salt Lake wanted to stay in Utah but were keep shows on 3-year contracts. City despite a shortage of lodg- considering cities in other states They extended the contract by ing and meeting space, officials because of a shortage of hotel two years this time to keep it on announced Monday. rooms and insufficient conven- a three-year rolling cycle in line Utah officials said during a tion center space in Salt Lake with most of the 90 shows the news conference that the show City. company oversees, she said. has renewed its contract for two The expo allows store owners Lowery said they aren’t wor- more years through 2018. to meet with manufacturers and ried that negotiations for a new The show is staged twice a year preview products that will reach convention center hotel recently and brings the state a $45 mil- the retail market soon. It has fell through between Salt Lake lion annual economic boost. The grown significantly since 5,000 County and Omni Hotels & business-to-business expo was people attended the first show in Resorts. considering other cities. Salt Lake City in 1996. The recent “We know there’s a little blip in “The Outdoor Retailer Show summer expo drew about 27,000 the road, but we’re 100 percent has grown well beyond a suc- people. confident that’s going to move cessful trade show and is part of Though the show has had forward in the right direction and the DNA” of the state of Utah, contracts as long as five years that’s going to open up opportu- said Brad Petersen, director with Salt Lake City in the past, nities for us in the future,” Lowery of the Utah Office of Outdoor Lowery said the company that said. Recreation. Show officials considered moving to Las Vegas, Chicago, Anaheim, California, and Orlando, Inspiring Florida, but decided to stay in Healthy Salt Lake City because a survey Lives of show exhibitors and attendees revealed an overwhelming desire Look for it every month in your to keep the show in Utah, show Tooele Transcript spokeswoman Kate Lowery said Bulletin in a phone interview. “Salt Lake City lives the same TOOELETRANSCRIPT lifestyle that our show exempli- BULLETIN A4 OPEN FORUM

A4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN TUESDAY August 25, 2015

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

OUR VIEW Race on! Commissioners and Mitime’s deal for Miller track looks to be in the best interest of the county

The global economy’s far reach just hit Tooele County in a big way. The impact came last Tuesday when the Tooele County Commission announced that it had signed a memorandum of understanding to sell Miller Motorsports Park to a Chinese company for $20 million. Unless the deal sud- denly sours, the facility will be renamed Utah Motorsports Campus come Jan. 1, 2016. As we reported in last Thursday’s edition, the name of the Chinese com- pany is Mitime Investment and Development Group. Mitime is owned by Chinese billionaire industrialist Li Shufu. Shufu also owns the Geely Group of Companies, which is hailed as China’s largest independent auto and motor- cycle manufacturer. Geely owns Volvo and is building a new Volvo plant in South Carolina. Geely claimed revenues in excess of $23 billion in 2013. Shufu founded Geely in 1986. He is known to have used creativity and determination to overcome huge business hurdles to succeed in communist China. It’s good to know that the man who wants to buy Miller Motorsports Park understands the value of hard work — and appears to be a capitalist. But for a facility the late Larry H. Miller reportedly invested more than $100 million into, what Shufu has offered to pay — and the commissioners have agreed to take — at first sounds like a steal, not a deal. Yet, before critics blast the commissioners for not getting more cash, two key points need to be remembered: First, the 511-acre facility was appraised at $26 million to $28 million by the county and an independent appraiser. Second, it’s hard to ask for more money for a racetrack that struggled to turn a profit since it opened in 2006 — a struggle made public when the Larry H. Miller Group announced in May that it would walk away from the facility this fall. But there is more to this between Mitime and the county that makes it align with the commissioners’ plan to find a buyer passionate about racing and willing to invest more money into the facility beyond the initial GUEST OPINION purchase price. In its proposal to the county, Mitime intends to continue current opera- tions at the racetrack, and to keep as many of the current Miller Motorsports Park employees as possible. Furthermore, it wants to turn the racetrack into a Hypocrisy of the ‘family friendly’ workplace “comprehensive motor sports education and technology development facil- ity” for China’s fledgling automotive racing industry. etflix just announced it’s offer- Partly because being promoted Plans include building an oval racetrack, Rally-X course, a drag strip, a ing paid leave for new mothers — getting more equity, running a divi- hotel, classrooms and more to support the Utah Motorsports Campus’ busi- Nand fathers for the first year Robert Reich sion, making partner — promises such ness and education operations. Mitime also intends to build race cars there after the birth or adoption of a child. vast rewards. Vaster rewards than any GUEST COLUMNIST and then ship them to China. Other high-tech firms are close behind. generation before them has ever been All of which will cost millions of dollars to construct, staff and sustain. And Some big law firms are also get- offered. all of which will contribute to the area’s property and sales tax base. Mitime ting into the act. Orrick, Herrington & Also, you’re either on the fast track, believes its goals for the racetrack could generate more than $1 billion in eco- Sutcliffe is offering 22 paid weeks off for the Family and Medical Leave Act of or you’re on a dead-end road. nomic benefit to the county over the next 25 years. both male and female attorneys. 1993 (which I am proud to have imple- “I’ve got to show total dedication,” It sounds almost too good to be true. But if Mitime does move forward with Even Wall Street is taking baby steps mented as labor secretary under Bill one of my former students explained. all of its plans, Tooele County’s economy will benefit. The commissioners are in the direction of family-friendly work. Clinton) requires it. “It’s all or nothing.” congratulated and thanked for negotiating a deal that appears to have the Goldman Sachs just doubled paid But time granted by the Family and Which is why millennial men — who county’s best interest at heart. And Mitime is congratulated for having the parental leave to four weeks. Medical Leave Act doesn’t come with research shows have more egalitarian vision to create this opportunity for Miller Motorsports Park. All of this should be welcome news. pay, which is why only 40 percent of eli- attitudes about family and gender roles Millennials now constitute the largest gible workers can afford to use it. And it than their predecessors — are none- segment of the American workforce. doesn’t cover companies or franchises theless failing to live up to their values Many are just forming families, so the with fewer than 50 employees. once they hit the treadmills. GUEST OPINION new family-friendly policies seem ide- Almost all other advanced nations It’s also why women on such high- ally timed. provide three or four months paid leave powered career tracks are delaying or But before we celebrate the dawn — to fathers as well as mothers — plus ultimately giving up on being mothers. For kids, participation, effort of a new era, keep two basic truths in paid sick leave, generous vacation time, Or they’re giving up on the fast track. mind. and limits on how many work hours After the collapse of 2000, the First, these new policies apply only employers can demand. share of women working in high tech should be its own reward to a tiny group considered “talent” — The second thing to know about the dropped sharply. And although tech highly educated and in high demand. new family-friendly work policies is recovered, female participation is still 6 FL quarterbacks fear They’re getting whatever perks firms that relatively few talented millennials percent lower than in 1998. Pittsburgh Steelers line- can throw at them in order to recruit are taking advantage of them. If they’re lucky, women on the fast Nbacker James Harrison. So and keep them. They can’t take the time. track can afford to buy their way to should participation trophies, the “Netflix’s continued success hinges One of my former University of motherhood. Marissa Mayer, appointed ubiquitous trinkets given to children on us competing for and keeping the California at Berkeley students who’s Yahoo’s CEO while six months preg- for merely showing up and round- most talented individuals in their field,” now at a tech firm across the Bay told nant, was back at her desk two weeks ing out the rosters of local sports Tawni Cranz, Netflix’s chief talent offi- me he’s working 15-hour days. Another after giving birth. leagues. cer, wrote in a company blog. who’s at a Washington law firm said It’s possible for such women to have The other day, Harrison learned That Neflix has a “chief talent officer” she’s on call 24/7. Emails often arrive it all — to “lean in” as Sheryl Sandberg that his sons had brought a couple tells you a lot. past midnight, followed by text mes- puts it — only because they have of them home and was none too Netflix’s new policy doesn’t apply to sages asking why the emails haven’t enough resources for 24-hour child pleased: “I came home to find out all Netflix employees, by the way. Those been answered. care, car service for the kids and nan- that my boys received two trophies author Ashley Merryman cites a in Netflix’s DVD division aren’t cov- These young men won’t take paterni- nies, and all the extra help needed. for nothing, participation trophies!” Southern California branch of the ered. They’re not “talent.” They’re like ty leave, and these young women won’t I’m delighted that Netflix and other He swiftly returned the offend- American Youth Soccer Organization the vast majority of American workers even get pregnant — because it looks high-powered firms are offering family- ing tokens and explained himself that distributes about 3,500 awards — considered easily replaceable. bad to their employers. friendly work. on Instagram: “These trophies will per season, with about a third of Employers treat replaceable workers Forget work-life balance. It’s work- But I take most of it with a grain of be given back until they earn a real players getting two awards each. as costs to be cut, not as assets to be as-life. silicon. So should you. trophy. I’m sorry I’m not sorry for Local branches of the soccer outfit, developed. Replaceable workers almost A recent New York Times story about believing that everything in life according to Merryman, spend as never get paid family leave; they get a Amazon reported that when young Reich is Chancellor’s Professor should be earned and I’m not about much as 12 percent of their budget few paid sick days and barely any vaca- workers hit the wall from the unrelent- of Public Policy at the University of to raise two boys to be men by mak- on trophies. tion time. ing pace, they’re told to climb it. California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow ing them believe that they are enti- The popular i9 youth sports If such replaceables are eligible for 12 Why do the talented millennials work at the Center for Developing Economies. tled to something just because they league exemplifies the award- weeks of family leave, it’s only because so hard? tried their best.” happy times. As a newspaper report Harrison can be forgiven for hav- explained, “To protect the other ing any touchy-feely sentiment children’s self esteem, there are no wrung out of him by clawing his MVPs. Every player is given a sports- GUEST OPINION way to the top of the most punish- manship award, a participant award ing meritocracy in all of sports. He and a celebratory icon in their was signed by the Steelers as an online i9 ‘Trophy Case.’” What, no Iran wants high-tech value meal and no fries undrafted rookie, got cut multiple ESPY Arthur Ashe Courage Awards? times and considered quitting and There is such a thing as winning n the wake of the Iranian nuclear cally a loss-leader for China. And unlike becoming a truck driver like his dad, and losing, and excelling and failing. agreement, Gen. Mohammad Reza with Western offerings, none of the until he finally caught on in the NFL, It’s OK for kids to understand that, INaghdi, a commander of Iran’s Rachel Marsden countries that import Chinese hard- where they don’t honor you for par- and in fact, if they don’t, they are Revolutionary Guard, expressed con- GUEST COLUMNIST ware seem to care that the Chinese ticipating. going to be shocked by life. There’s cern that the United States would try to themselves are part of the package, Most people are still with no reason to try to hide it under a impose Western culture in his country. because China has a policy of non- Harrison, if a Reason-Rupe poll from raft of automatic trophies that will “We thought that they would bring interference in other nations’ domestic last year is to be believed. It found never be as valued as something Boeing technology,” Naghdi said, “but score a Boeing manufacturing plant affairs. The Chinese come in, build that 57 percent of people think only truly extraordinary or truly earned. they want to bring McDonald’s.” before the ink is dry on the nuclear whatever infrastructure is required to winning players should get trophies, Participation — and effort Iran attempted to reverse-engineer deal. It wasn’t long ago that Iranians get what they need and to provide basic putting a clear majority on the side — should be its own reward. No a downed U.S. drone a few years ago, were hijacking Boeing planes. Still, civilian needs, and don’t interfere with of the atavistic impulse to reward one gave us trophies when my Little and earlier this year it detonated a Naghdi’s point isn’t entirely without anything beyond their focus. This works only victory. League team scuffled to a pathetic homemade replica of a U.S. aircraft car- merit. There has to be more to the in China’s favor when seeking out new The trophy has gone from excep- losing season on the dusty neighbor- rier during military drills. Perhaps Iran Western development of emerging mar- business. tional reward for excellence, to nice hood ballfield. We participated, we should prove it can be trusted to not kets than merely the status quo, with There’s an impression that China is gesture, to practically an entitle- got humiliated, and we moved on, reverse-engineer the Big Mac special the West treating these markets like a relatively benign when it’s allowed to ment. When a cash-strapped Little having indubitably established what sauce before it’s entrusted with the sort candy store of resources to be exploit- enter through the front door. The West’s League in Oklahoma canceled its James Harrison said of his sons’ of high-tech weaponry Boeing could ed. That is, until trouble flares up in advantage is that it knows how to create participation trophies a couple of unearned trophies: “Sometimes your provide. these emerging markets again because wealth. years ago, one parent complained, best is not enough.” Based on Naghdi’s comments, it they lacked the sort of economic sta- Iran’s hard-liners don’t want “Thanks Little League for failing my sounds as if Iran is tired of China’s bility that can be built through vested McDonald’s and other symbols of son and disappointing him as well.” Lowry is editor of the National Happy Meal toy weapons — knockoffs mutual interests. Western culture to pollute their soci- Writing in The New York Times, Review. of Russian, American and European The long game is one of diplomatic ety. Understood. I know someone hardware — and wants the adult menu. and economic influence, and the West who expressed the same sentiment Iran reportedly just struck a deal to has to be able to leverage its assets to when stumbling upon a McDonald’s EDITORIAL BOARD acquire 24 Chinese J-10 fighter jets, compete with China in these new mar- in Brittany, France. “Why is that thing which look an awful lot like copies of kets. coming to get me all the way up here?” Joel J. Dunn Scott C. Dunn David J. Bern Lockheed Martin’s F-35. (China gets China is willing to give away its mili- he said. Publisher Emeritus President and Publisher Editor greater access to Iranian oil in the tary hardware in exchange for access While Iranians might still succumb With the exception of the “Our View” column, the opinions expressed on this page, exchange.) to energy and commodity resources. including the cartoon, are not necessarily endorsed by the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. Obviously, Iran shouldn’t be able to Knockoff military equipment is basi- SEE MARSDEN PAGE A5 ➤ A5

TUESDAY August 25, 2015 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A5 GUEST OPINION Hillary Clinton has Democrats in a desperate panic

merica isn’t yearning for them endure Trump, a man so intelligence agencies? — especially if that candidate is and other matters. Al Gore, the $200 million in love with his own voice that Using private servers helped widely thought by voters to be The knife turned a bit the Aman, to run for president John Kass he believes his brain farts are shield her work product from untrustworthy — has a problem. other day as her successor, and save us from those 1 per- GUEST COLUMNIST policy. the public and congressional Over the weekend in Iowa, she Secretary of State John Kerry, centers and their obnoxious car- The other day Trump said he committees trying to find out tried to blame the Republicans was interviewed by CBS News bon footprints. wants to take ISIS’ oil wealth. more about Benghazi. But her and everyone but herself. She about his government email. The same holds true for Crazy That’s the kind of thing Saddam paranoia, and her arrogance, also tried to turn her email Kerry was asked, “Do you Uncle Joe Biden. The vice presi- us, it won’t take two minutes Hussein wanted to do. It would could also very well have put her scandal into a joke while talk- think China and/or the Russians dent has as much bad video in before he’s puffing up his chest, give Vladimir Putin and every country at risk. ing about her new Snapchat are reading your email?” his past as Donald Trump, only talking in that scary Foghorn other boss the pretext to do Every day we learn about account. KERRY: The answer is it is very his are worse, since Biden’s Leghorn voice, flapping his arms the same. You see something, secure systems being hacked. “I love it. I love it,” she said. likely. It is not outside the realm come in strange accents. like a cartoon rooster. you grab something and say Most of us can’t write or under- “Those messages disappear all of possibility and we know that But they’ve been floated out At the big debate he’ll start “President Donald did it too.” stand code, but that doesn’t stop by themselves.” they have attacked a number there, listing like balloons in our rolling those eyes, just as he did Kuwaiti oil, or land, who knows, us from reflexively grabbing our Trying to turn national secu- of American interests over the presidential parade, because the before, sighing loudly and inces- just take what you want and wallets when news breaks about rity into a punch line is a stupid course of the last days. Democrats are in a panic. And santly like a teenager bent on watch the world go away. hackers hitting a department thing to do, especially when the CBS: It’s very likely that your you know why: burning your ears because you Republicans shouldn’t enjoy store or a gas station chain. We FBI has your server. emails are being read? Hillary Clinton is in the early said he couldn’t go to the con- themselves too much, because understand that. We know such The political problem for the KERRY: It is a possibility, stages of political sepsis. cert. And Democrats will turn to Sen. Elizabeth Warren is out thieves are out there. Democrats is that she might there’s no way for me ... and I Madam Inevitable cut her- each other and say: there. She’s silent. When Warren They could be overseas, or lose the election. But what if she certainly write things with that self with some bad emails. And Why did we do this again? stops being silent, they should sitting a table or two from your were to win? awareness.” rather than wash the wound The same holds true for worry. iced latte waiting to hack into We will have elected an impe- Enjoy the rest of the summer, thoroughly with soap that Biden. In the end, the grownups For now, Hillary’s political your checking account. Or, they rial personality who felt entitled Mrs. Clinton. But it’s too late to stings, maybe apply a tincture will ask that Joe remains locked health is a legitimate issue, could be agents of foreign intel- to use private email for govern- wash your hands of this. of iodine, she went into deep in the White House basement centering on those tens of thou- ligence intent on the servers in ment business — email that denial and jammed those fingers until this thing blows over. sands of emails she kept on a the home of Madam Secretary. reportedly contained classified Kass is a columnist for the in her pockets. Hillary was the inevitable one. private server at her home as And a candidate who puts information, including discus- Chicago Tribune. His email She kept pretending it was And a year ago she would have she went about her country’s their own politics over security sions on secret drone programs address is [email protected]. nothing, really, and now they’re laughed that mirthless Hillary business as secretary of state. puffy and throbbing and down- laugh and taken a pin to any After denial and stalling, she right uncomfortable, especially Gore and Biden trial balloons. finally turned her server over to for any Democrat who thinks a And she’d smile as they made the FBI. Her critics insist this is few months down the road. those sad hissing sounds that a criminal issue. But whether it ���������������������������� But Gore as a candidate? balloons make when they fly off is or isn’t, the damage is political Please. If by some weird hap- and die. because of one simple, nonpar- penstance he actually gets in the Of course the Republicans are tisan question: Was her private race instead of merely teasing enjoying this, even as most of server compromised by foreign CLERK’S CORNER By-mail voting again � increases turnout

he 2015 Primary Election number of programs designed was held Aug. 11. While to help citizens who qualify: Tthere wasn’t a landslide Marilyn Gillette Veteran’s Exemption, Blind turnout, it once again shows GUEST COLUMNIST Exemption, Circuit Breaker, that by mail voting increases Indigent (County) Abatement, turnout. The results were as fol- and Mobile Home Owner. lows: For more information please Stockton Town Council go to www.co.tooele.ut.us/ Grantsville City Nando Meli, Jr. 43 Auditor/abatements.htm, or call Registered voters 4124 Thomas (KJ) Karjola 48 Kathy at 435-843-3132. Ballots cast 541 George B. Carter 27 Midyear Budget Adjustments: Percentage voted 13.12 per- Judy A Bori 56 At the Tooele County Commission cent meeting held Aug. 18, the com- The top six candidates in missioners approved mid-year Grantsville City Council Grantsville City (three city budget adjustments. These mid- THANK YOU Jewel Allen 298 council seats open) and the top year adjustments were created by Krista Sparks 319 four candidates in the Town the departments petitioning the Scott Stice 218 of Stockton (two town council commission for increases they felt Tooele County, James Christensen 218 seats open) will move on to the they needed. The commission- Neil A. Critchlow 307 General Election on Nov. 3. ers either granted the request, Michael L. Tate 59 For a precinct by precinct tweaked it or denied it. To see for helping bl Jamie Topham 92 count, please go to www. the approved changes, please ou e U co.tooele.ut.us/clerk/Elections. follow this link. http://www. make D p Stockton Town htm. co.tooele.ut.us/Auditor/pdf/ Registered voters 293 Property Tax Exemptions: 2015MidYearBudgetAdjustmen . Ballots cast 105 The deadline for Property Tax Marilyn Gillette is the Tooele Percentage voted 36 percent Abatements and Exemption Coutny Clerk/Auditor. Programs is Sept. 1. There are a P r o s duc ay promoting its developments in and Europe have managed e D Marsden nanotechnology, for instance. to cooperate successfully on continued from page A4 Maybe we’ll eventually see Iran defense via equity crosshold- approach Western firms to pro- ings in each other’s defense pose some cooperative devel- industries, despite occasional A HUGE SUCCESS! to the seduction of the golden opment that doesn’t involve turbulence. arches, McDonald’s isn’t the weaponry. For example, French The most exciting thing about West’s most significant tool for defense contractor Thales has new markets is the potential for And also for making you cultural leverage anyway. In the undertaken a number of joint bringing diverse talents together same breath as they’re slamming ventures in China that pertain to to create new solutions, and to & your family healthier. McDonald’s, the Iranians are security and transportation and share knowledge and culture telling us exactly what they want have nothing to do with warfare. — and maybe even a side of Live Fit has matched easy choice at home, from the West: ultra-high-tech So how about coming to the McDonald’s fries. $5000 in produce sales work, school and in manufacturing. That’s precisely table with some ideas, rather why it should be used as the than just criticism of what you Marsden is a columnist, politi- for the community, the community. The ultimate enticement in develop- don’t want to see happen? cal strategist and former Fox one way Live Fit Tooele program continues ing closer relations with new Ideological agendas will News host based in Paris. She is frontier markets like Iran, not always take precedence over the host of the syndicated talk County is reshaping the at Vine Street Market to be given away without some- business in some countries. But show “Unredacted with Rachel community, making until all grant funds thing substantial in return. if anything can overcome such Marsden” Tuesdays at 7 p.m. Iran has its own scientists obstacles, it’s the prospect of Eastern: www.unredactedshow. the healthy choice an have been spent. and researchers. It’s constantly mutual profit. After all, Russia com.

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A6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN TUESDAY August 25, 2015 OBITUARIES

Ellen Pewtress Easton and traditions, nourishing rela- Nicole Sharee Snow by her two children, Cyress and Our mother, sister, aunt and tionships with those she cared Nicole Sharee Snow, 28, our Ceinna Brady; her parents Gary “gran” is now free of pain, as she about, and giving generously of valiant warrior, left us on Aug. 18, and Sheila Snow; sister Brittany returned to her Heavenly Father her time, wisdom, and means. 2015, to spread her wings and fly (Jesse) Buhler; special nephew on Aug. 18, 2015. Ellen was born free among the angels. Nicole was She is preceded in death by her and niece Gary and Samantha in Delta, Utah, on Nov. 9, 1939, parents George Pewtress, and a wonderful mother who loved to George Pewtress and Savalla her children with all of her heart Buhler, sister Brandi Snow; Wayne and Savalla Bryant; her many other relatives and friends Webb, and raised by Wayne and sisters, Carol Smith and Llona and a guardian for her sisters and her true love, Tyrell Brady. Savalla Bryant in Tooele, Utah. Pewtress; and her eternal com- who loved them unconditionally. Overcoming many obstacles early She was a wonderful daughter; Graveside services will be held panion, Lt. Col. Byron S. Easton. on, she graduated from Salt Lake her daddy’s “Little Britches” and at the Grantsville Cemetery on She is survived by her brothers; Trade Tech and worked as a sec- her mother’s best friend. She was Aug. 27 at 1 p.m. There will be a retary for the United States Army Don (Marilyn) Bryant and Gene a special friend and confidant (Sherry) Bryant; sister, Cindy celebration of Nicole’s life at her for many years where she met to many! Nicole struggled with parents’ home after the services. the love of her life, Lt. Col. Byron (Allen) Cunningham; children, addiction for many years and Family and friends are invited to S. Easton. They were married in Tamera (Dane) Hammond and fought valiantly to overcome it. 1966, and lived in Kansas, Japan, Timothy Hansen; nine grandchil- After a long period of sobriety, bring their happiest memories Korea, and Wyoming before even- dren; and many great-grandchil- her addiction won this battle, to share during a luncheon in tually returning to Utah. They and play Rummikub, but her true dren. In honoring the wishes of but her spirit will win the war! others and will be missed by all her honor. Services by Dalton- were later sealed in the Salt Lake joy in life was her family. She was Ellen, a private memorial service Nicole was an inspiration to who knew her. She is survived Hoopes Funeral Home. Temple in 1993. She loved to read dedicated to creating memories will be held. NOTES OF APPRECIATION Pete Mermejo Tooele High School (Class of Pete Mermejo, former resi- 1960) and a U.S. Navy veteran. The family of Ethel Bourget Thanks are also needed for the Thanks everyone for the sup- thanks to businesses and friends dent of Ophir and Stockton, died He is survived by his wife, four would like to thank all who Knights of Columbus, who pro- port and donations to help with who made the “Golf Fore Dusty” May 26, 2015, in Carmichael, daughters and extended family. helped make our very difficult vided the honor guard. Thanks medical expenses for Dusty such a huge success. We truly California. He was born Aug. Funeral services were held in time easier to go through. We to Bill for the music — well done. Griffith. Thanks to our mayor for do not have words adequate to 9, 1940. He was a graduate of New Mexico. would like to thank Father Sam Thanks for the flowers, food and breakfast, C & G for a BBQ lunch, describe how grateful we are to for all he did for Ethel, for the sympathy cards, and for the Oquirrh Hills pro Chris Scott, our friends and family at this blessing and the Mass; also money received. May God bless the Transcript Bulletin for get- time. thanks to Rick Hoffman for his you all. ting the word out and a special Dusty Griffith and family. prayers and the blessing of the Ethel’s family: Nabor Medina TOOELE Your Complete TRANSCRIPT gravesite. Thanks also to Cree and family; Renee Hauser and Local News Source. BULLETIN Medina for having her crew of family; Norm Bourget and fam- women help with the luncheon. ily.

MATTERS OF FAITH RICHARD NORTON To live according to Lady Wisdom is a great August 26, 1958 - January 17, 2012 Happy 57th challenge but will bring great rewards Birthday! Editor’s note: “Matters of time to time. Dogs and cats are and beautiful. I may put that one faith” is a column that provides usually always charming and are in my office. local religious leaders a place to Samuel Dinsdale rarely a disagreeable companion. Good juicy gossip is some- write about how their respective A popular theme that is times too difficult to resist but “Yes my life is better left to chance GUEST COLUMNIST faiths provide hope, courage and repeated over and over in the the writer tells us that we will not I could have missed the pain but I’d have strength in these modern times. books of wisdom literature has to burst if we do not reveal what we Had to miss the dance” do with finding wise people and come to know. We are advised to hat is it to live wisely? It multiplies friends, and gracious attaching yourself to them as a keep that news to ourselves. It Love, seems to be the peren- lips prompt friendly greetings. student. One is to listen much does no good to spread the mis- Wnial topic of what to do Let your acquaintances be many more than speak. “Frequent the fortune of others. “He who gloats Your family who misses you more every day. and what to avoid. but one in a thousand your company of the elders: whoever over evil will meet with evil and As an avid listener of NPR confidant … a faithful friend is a is wise, stay close to him … If he who repeats an evil report and watcher of public television, sturdy shelter; he who finds one you see a man of prudence, seek has no sense. Never repeat gos- REST IN PEACE there is a limitless amount of finds a treasure. A faithful friend him out: let your feet wear away sip and you will not be reviled … programming of how to live your is beyond price, no sum can bal- his doorstep!”(Sirach 6: 34-37) Let anything you hear die within life in a better manner. From ance his worth.” (Sirach 6: 5-16) Saint Teresa of Avila was asked you; be assured it will not make Radio West on KUER, I learned The writer emphasizes that if she would prefer either a wise you burst. When a fool hears to avoid all fruit juices and to what we say to others will be or a holy spiritual director. She something, he is in labor, like a Quality with Utahs Best Value eat the fruits instead, since our held against us, so we should say responded a wise one. woman giving birth to a child. body metabolizes the sugars little and when we find someone The writer advises to be gen- Like an arrow lodged in a man’s differently. God help you if you who will not blab our confidenc- erous to the poor and to not be thigh is gossip in the breast of a drink orange and apple juice in es we should prize that person. miserly with yourself. I trust the fool.” (Sirach 19:6) the morning. Sugar goes straight Regarding companionship, afterlife will be better than he I know some of the big gos- into your bloodstream raising the writer gives advice on find- describes. “Deprive not your- sips in my parish and the great your insulin levels. Eat the apple ing a spouse and how this choice self of present good things; let harm that they do to individuals, or the orange (as God intended), will affect the rest of your life for no choice portion escape you. the community and ultimately stay away from the juice! better or for worse. “It is better to Will you not leave your riches to themselves. Additionally with From the Diane Rehm Show, dwell in a corner of the housetop to others, and your earnings to Facebook, one can broadcast also on KUER, I learned that than in a roomy house with a be divided by lot? Give, take and gossip with greater efficiency, fasting is not only a spiritual dis- quarrelsome woman (or man).” treat yourself well, for in the efficacy and permanence. What cipline; it also is a very healthy (Proverbs 25: 24) nether world there are no joys to one writes will live forever on practice. Fasting more than 12 Or “It is better to dwell in the seek.”(Sirach 14:14-16) the web and be available for all hours gives your liver a break so wilderness than with a quar- We are reminded that God to see. that it can more easily process relsome and vexatious wife (or hears the poor person’s prayer; Serving all of Tooele County & fats in your body. Those who fast husband).” (Proverbs 21: 19) On therefore we must share what What these bits of wisdom Surrounding Communities live much longer lives. There are the other hand, if one is a good we have. “My son, rob not the teach me is not necessarily that I always bits of information that spouse and finds someone else poor man of his livelihood; force need to find people who possess help to change our lives, so that who is a good match, then there not the eyes of the needy to turn these good traits; it is that I need WE HONOR OTHER MORTUARIES FUNERAL to continue to strive to live that PLANS AND REFUND EXCESS MONIES we may live a better way. is happiness. “When one finds away. A hungry man grieve not, There are a number of books a worthy wife, her value is far a needy man anger not; do not way myself and to make great effort to remove these fatal flaws www.daltonhoopes.com in the Old Testament that make beyond pearls. Her husband exasperate the downtrodden up the wisdom that has been entrusting his heart to her has delay not to give to the needy … from my character. garnered over the centuries an unfailing prize.”(Proverbs For if in bitterness of his should For all of us to live according 435.884.3031 by the Jews. If we live well, we 31:10-11) he curse you, his Creator will to Lady Wisdom is the greatest follow Lady Wisdom. If we do The marital relationship can hear his prayer.” (Sirach 4: 1-6) challenge but also will bring the not follow God’s laws, we are make life a great blessing or One should use their possessions greatest rewards. We hopefully following Lady Folly. “Wisdom a great hell, so those who are well to help those in need and to all have the experience of know- ADOPT ME! instructs her children and considering marriage should live a full and happy life. ing someone who showed us admonishes those who seek her. do so with great trepidation, I can’t resist adding this one, how to live wisely. Their life was He who loves her loves life; those discernment, and fear for what which speaks for itself. “With all attractive to us in its goodness who seek her out win her favor.” could happen. If one chooses the your soul, fear God, revere his and simplicity. We move for- (Sirach 4:11-12) wrong person or is not ready for priests. With all your strength, ward in the process of metanoia Regarding friendship, the this level of commitment, it will love your Creator, forsake not or conversion, so that we can writer of Sirach advises against cause great suffering. As I have his ministers. Honor God and become who God made us to be. assuming that most people are learned from my own life, it is respect the priest: give him his worthy of trust and when one much worse being around some- portion as you have been com- Rev. Dinsdale is the priest at St. finds a person such a person is one who is disagreeable than to manded…” (Sirach 7:29-31) Marguerite Catholic Church in a great blessing. “A kind mouth feel a tinge of loneliness from Respect the priest, how simple Tooele.

transports more than 300 vet- the midday service for the F401 fare and must be made between Bus erans, seniors and people with route was dropped due to low two hours and seven days in continued from page A1 disabilities to medical appoint- ridership. UTA began offering an advance. ments in Tooele County and Salt additional route, the F402, on UTA is also adding an addi- bit but not too far,” Morton said. Lake City. Aug. 16 to provide service within tional morning and evening Morton said the service is Morton said both the on- Tooele. trip between Grantsville and being paid for with a $200,000 demand bus and medical shuttle The new route expands ser- grant through the Congestion services need volunteer drivers vice to the east side of Tooele and Stansbury Park on the F401 route Mitigation and Air Quality pro- to keep up with demand. Anyone can make a scheduled deviation that connects with bus service to gram, which will need to be interested in volunteering can fill within a three-quarter mile radi- Salt Lake. renewed annually. Half of the out an application at the Tooele us. Taylor said the new service Taylor said the county taking grant is earmarked for the pur- County Aging/Transportation should arrive every 45 minutes at over the midday service and UTA GERMAN SHEPARD (2 YRS.) chase of two new wheelchair Department at 59 E. Vine St. and each stop, including TATC, Valley creating the F402 route is a more accessible vehicles for the fleet complete a background check Mental Health and the Tooele efficient means of providing and the remainder will cover the paid for by the county. Senior Center. For more info. on animals- public transportation in Tooele Adoption Procedure cost for two part-time employees Residents looking to use the To schedule a deviation to County. Tooele County Local shelter adoption requires for scheduling and dispatch and bus service should contact the the normal bus route, riders Animal Shelter 882-1051 vaccination payment, licensing operation costs. scheduling dispatch office at can call 801-287-7433 between “I really do think it’s a best case Tooele City and possible shelter fee. The on-demand service is in 435-843-4102. 8:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. on week- scenario,” he said. “We’re creat- addition to the medical shuttle Ryan Taylor, the coordinated days. Deviations cost an addi- ing a more efficient service.” Animal Shelter 882-8900 Shelters are required to service the county operates that mobility manager for UTA, said tional $1.25 to the standard bus [email protected] Grantsville hold animals for 5 business Animal Shelter 884-6881 days before euthanization.

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TUESDAY August 25, 2015 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 6:50 a.m. 8:11 p.m. Thursday 6:51 a.m. 8:10 p.m. Friday 6:52 a.m. 8:08 p.m. Saturday 6:53 a.m. 8:07 p.m. Sunday 6:54 a.m. 8:05 p.m. Monday 6:55 a.m. 8:04 p.m. W Th F Sa Su M Tu Tuesday 6:56 a.m. 8:02 p.m. The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ The Moon Rise Set number, the greater the need for eye and skin Wednesday 5:52 p.m. 3:17 a.m. protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Thursday 6:39 p.m. 4:21 a.m. Very High; 11+ Extreme Friday 7:23 p.m. 5:30 a.m. Saturday 8:04 p.m. 6:43 a.m. ALMANAC Sunday 8:43 p.m. 7:56 a.m. Statistics for the week ending August 24. Showers and a heavier Warmer; a t-storm Sunshine and very Monday 9:22 p.m. 9:10 a.m. Partly sunny Partly sunny and nice Partly sunny Mostly sunny Temperatures Tuesday 10:01 p.m. 10:23 a.m. t-storm; cooler around in the p.m. warm High/Low past week 96/55 Full Last New First Normal high/low past week 89/63 78 59 85 59 89 67 92 68 90 69 82 59 89 59 Average temp past week 73.5 Normal average temp past week 76.1 TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER Daily Temperatures High Low Aug 29 Sep 5 Sep 13 Sep 21 Shown is Wednesday’s Forecasts and graphics provided by weather. Temperatures are Wednesday’s highs and AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015 Wednesday night’s lows.

UTAH WEATHER Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Logan Grouse 75/50 Wendover Precipitation (in inches) Creek 86/62 Knolls Clive Lake Point 78/50 82/59 80/60 80/62 Ogden Stansbury Park 77/57 Erda 79/60 Vernal Grantsville 78/59 Pine Canyon Salt Lake City 73/54 81/60 69/55 Tooele 80/59 Bauer 78/59 Last Normal Month Normal Year Normal 77/59 Tooele Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D Provo Roosevelt 78/59 75/54 74/56 Stockton Pollen Index Price 78/58 70/56 High Nephi Rush Valley 77/54 78/57 Ophir Moderate 73/54 Low Delta Manti Absent 81/61 76/52 Green River Tu W Th F Sa Su M 80/60 Dugway Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma Richfield Gold Hill 78/60 80/51 Moab 81/59 RIVERS AND LAKES Hanksville 79/62 Beaver 79/61 Vernon In feet as of 7 a.m. Monday 78/52 Ibapah 77/56 24-hour 85/56 Stage Change Vernon Creek at Vernon 0.95 none Cedar City Blanding South Willow Creek St. George 81/56 76/61 at Grantsville 1.36 none 90/69 Kanab 81/56 Eureka 72/54 Great Salt Lake Elevation at Saltair Boat Harbor 4191.28

together, the tax commission’s Tax reports do not disclose confiden- continued from page A1 tial information for any individual business. fidence in the economy and their From 2005 to 2015 taxable sales financial security, or they have for the building materials and more disposable income to spend, garden supply sector in Tooele Robson said. County — among the business- The 12.2 percent increase in es included in this category are taxable sales recorded by Tooele Home Depot, Cal Ranch, Phil’s County in the first quarter of 2015 Glass, and Standard Plumbing outpaced the state’s 5.1 percent — grew by 819 percent. increase in taxable sales for the The large jump in taxable sales same time period. came after Home Depot opened “An increase of 12.2 percent in 2006. Likewise, taxable sales for Tooele County compared to for the sporting goods and hobby 5.1 percent for the state, that’s sector jumped 132 percent after outstanding,” said Nicole Cline, Big 5 Sporting Goods opened in former economic development 2008. director for Tooele County. “Way On a smaller scale, the clothing to go, Tooele!” and accessories sector — which A comparison of Tooele includes a handful of small stores County’s sales increase with the that only sell clothing — increased Consumer Price Index makes the by 46 percent from 2010 to 2015. increase appear even more tri- The increase coincided with the umphant. opening of several clothing stores, For March 2015, the CPI for including rue21 and DownEast in all items in the Midwest region, 2012. of which Utah is part, was down “It does appear that ‘If you build 0.9 percent over the previous 12 it, they will come’ theory applies months, according to the Bureau to retail businesses in Tooele of Labor Statistics. County,” Cline said. “At least when That means while prices were it comes to chain stores.” dropping, Tooele County’s taxable Many of Tooele County’s larg- sales, collected on a percentage of est employers, such as Cargill, sales, went up. Morton Salt, ATI Titanium, U.S. A look at the 15-year trend of Magnesium, and Detroit Diesel, taxable sales in the county indi- are part of the manufacturing sec- cates that taxable sales have tor. grown faster than the population The manufacturing sector expe- of the county. rienced a 12 percent decline in From 2000 to 2015, Tooele first quarter taxable sales in 2008, County’s population grew by 49 during the recession. However, percent, according to U.S. Census the sector rebounded with a 30 Bureau population estimates. percent increase in taxable sales First quarter taxable sales in the in the first quarter of 2015 over the county.” ly recovered from their recession people eating out, according to Tooele County’s overall county grew by 104 percent from first quarter of 2008. The tax commission sector that losses. First quarter sales in the Robson. increase for taxable sales for the 2000 to 2015. Motor vehicle sales is one retail includes new and used motor motor vehicle sector in 2015 in One of the few sectors with a first quarter of 2015 is a posi- The 15-year taxable sales data sector where Tooele County cap- vehicle sales also includes auto Tooele County was $13.3 million. decline in taxable sales for the tive sign, but Robson is waiting for Tooele County also shows a tured sales from outside the coun- parts and tire stores. In the first “That rebound in auto sales is a first quarter of 2015 includes to see how recent instabilities in pattern that indicates the county’s ty, according to Cline. quarter of 2009, taxable sales in good sign,” Cline said. “That’s real Tooele County’s waste manage- the U.S. stock market play out retailers may be doing a better “Before the recession, Tooele the motor vehicle sector dropped good to see.” ment industries: EnergySolutions, and affect consumer confidence job of capturing sales that used to County did real good with collect- to $9.2 million from $15.3 million According to state data, restau- URS, Clean Harbors, and Wasatch before making predictions for the take place outside of the county. ing tax from automobile sales,” in 2008. Sales in this sector also rant sales are also up. Regional Landfill. rest of the year. The Utah Tax Commission she said. “It was one of our best dropped in the first quarter of A 14 percent increase in res- Taxable sales in this sector “It does look like Tooele County reports taxable sales by indus- sectors. The large amount of sales 2010 to 7.6 million. taurant taxable sales over the first declined from $2.4 million in the may be headed for a year of eco- try sectors. By lumping several was an indicator that we were Motor vehicle and related retail quarter of 2014 in Tooele County first quarter of 2012 to $1.2 million nomic growth,” he said. businesses in similar categories pulling people in from outside the sales in Tooele County have near- follows a national trend of more for the first quarter of 2015. [email protected]

worse than it is. Don’t just assume directed the Utah Chapter of Smokey it’s bad just because it looks the Sierra Club’s Smart Energy continued from page A1 gunky out there.” But if residents Campaign for four years. are impaired by coughing or feel “Despite what the state’s say- lates were recorded on Thursday they can’t get a good breath, he ing, this air is really bad for any- and Friday. said they should stop what they’re body. The smoke just makes it that In the early part of last week, doing and go indoors. much worse,” he said. “There’s the wind blew smoke into Second, Call warned that a no doubt that the particles from Tooele County from wildfires in swamp cooler isn’t a good air fil- smoke, whether it’s from wildfires California. Near the end of the ter, and smoke could still enter or fireplaces is really bad. It gets week, the wind shifted from the buildings cooled by swamp cool- in your lungs. ... People need to north, carrying smoke from wild- ers. be really careful with how much fires in Washington and Idaho, “Anybody that has central AC, exertion they do outdoors.” Call said. when the smoke is like this, they Wagner also encouraged peo- “[Currently,] the wind has shift- ought to close their windows and ple to get an air filter to reduce ed from the south and has started use their air conditioning,” he exposure in their homes. to clean out the air,” he said. “But added. As of Monday afternoon, the even after it cleans out, if the Tim Wagner, representing the EPA Air Quality Index classified wind shifts back from the west or Utah Physicians for a Healthy Tooele as “moderate,” which is one north, the smoke will blow back Environment, said the air qual- category lower than “unhealthy in.” ity affected people more than the for sensitive groups.” Call said people didn’t need to state’s “unhealthy for sensitive According to the National worry about the air quality unless groups” label let on. Weather Service, the wind they felt physically bothered by it. Wagner is not a doctor, but will continue blowing from a

He recommended people remem- he earned a bachelor’s of science south-southeast direction until FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO ber two principles for staying degree in Environmental Science Wednesday evening. Smoke from wildfires in the California, Washington and Idaho has made the Tooele Valley hazy. Forecasters have called recent healthy: First, “it can look a lot from Utah State University and [email protected] weather “smokey sunshine.” The smoke created air quality issues in Tooele last week. A8

WHICH OF THESE A8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN TUESDAY August 25, 2015 Neuropathy SYMPTOMS Graffiti continued from page A1 DO YOU SUFFER FROM? “We see these cases increase in the summer,” Turnbow said. There have been more than 100 incidents related to graffiti and criminal mischief in Tooele City in the past 60 days, accord- ing to crimereports.com. One of those violations from July caused Reduced Blood Flow damage between $1,000 and $5,000, which classifies it as a third-degree felony under Utah state law. Graffiti charges depend on the amount of damage caused and Damaged Nerve range from misdemeanor charg- es for less than $1,000 of dam- age to a second-degree felony for If you suffer from a Single one of these more than $5,000 of damage. Torturous Symptoms - Numbness, Do You Have Any of the Criminal mischief charges Following Symptoms? cover a wide range of property Tingling or Sharp Nerve Pain damage offenses and also vary by �������������������������� the amount of damage caused. - Then the Facts Below may be the The possible charges range Most Important You have ever read in ������������������������������� between misdemeanor charges YOUR LIFE for less than $1,500 in damage to �������������������������������� a second-degree felony for more than $5,000 in damage. Call TODAY for Special Offer, ������������������������������ In addition to the high inci- First 25 callers! dence of reported vandalism, ��������������������������������� more people are aware of the 435-882-7200 crime with new technology, If so you may have a Turnbow said. Neuropathy affects every condition called “There is more of an awareness from things like social media,” part of your life walking, peripheral neuropathy. she said.

If you notice vandalism, FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO sitting, and even sleeping. you should do more than take The playground, restrooms and buildings are some of the things recently vandal- a picture for your Facebook ized with graffiti at the Red Delpapa/Babe Ruth Park in Tooele. Many locations in ����������������������������������������� page, however, Turnbow said. Tooele have been hit by vandals in recent weeks. ������������������������������������� How To Find Out If This Residents should report any �������������������������������������� incidents of graffiti or vandalism contact police, Turnbow said. “If it doesn’t get cleaned up, Will Work For You they see to the police so they can Another reason to report graf- others will come and do the same �������������������������������������������� ��������������������������������������������� look for similarities with other fiti and other vandalism is to thing,” Turnbow said. ���������������������������������������� ���������������������������������� incidents to help catch the cul- accelerate the cleanup process. If you notice graffiti, vandal- �������������������������������������������� �����For the first 25 callers only�������������� prits or enhance their charges, Graffiti that is left untouched can ism or other suspicious activ- ����������������������������������������� she said. encourage other offenders to tag ity in your community, contact ������������������������������������������ It’s important that anyone who the same building, sign or struc- Tooele County Dispatch at 435- ������������������������������������������ ������������������������������������������ ������������������������������������������� notices suspicious activity of any ture to mark their territory, she 882-5600. ����������������������������������������� kind in their neighborhood to said. [email protected] ������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������- ������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������ ��������������������������������������������� ����������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������������- Why not get help by those �������������������������������������������� trained to correct the major ���������������������� cause of peripheral neuropathy? ����������������������������������������� �������������������������������������- ������������������������������������������ ����������������������������������������- ����������������������������� ���������������������������������������� ��������������������������������������� ������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������������� ����������������������������������������� �������������������������� Here’s What To Do Now The Single Most Important The offer is only good for the first 25 Solution To Your Neuropathy: callers.��������������������������������� ����������������������������������������- ���������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������ �������� ����������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������������� ���������������������������� ����������� ����������������������������������- ������������������������������������������� ����������������������������������������� �����������������������������������������- FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO ������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������� Stansbury Park Elementary Principal Gina Ruiz holds open the door and greets parents and students on the first day of class ��������� ��������������������������������������������� for the Tooele County School District. ������������� It Promotes Rapid Healing In the story the students meet instead of 940, all the students fit Sincerely, School Sarah. Mr. Hartwell wakes up inside the school’s regular class- ������������������������������������������ continued from page A1 Sarah for her first day at a new rooms. ������������������������������������������ Dr. Dev Brown, D.C. school. The lower enrollment also ������������������������������������������- Help others. Inspire learning. Determined not to enjoy her means the school’s common ��������������������������������������������� Never give up. Encourage every- first day at school, Mr. Hartwell areas — hallways, lunchroom, ��������������������������������������� one. has to coax Sarah out of bed. library, and restrooms — will not ����������������������������������������������� P.S. At our office, we have The SHINE acronym is new to She eats a bite of toast and Mr. be stretched beyond their capac- ��������������������������������������������� Stansbury Elementary this year. Hartwell gets Sarah into the car. ity, according to Ruiz. ������������������������������������������� specialized treatment programs “SHINE came about as a result Once at school, the principal While enrollment is down, �����������������������������������������- for treating patients who suffer of a school climate survey that greets Sarah and grabs her by the the area continues to grow with ������������� we participated in last year,” said hand and takes her to her class- 14 new students enrolling at ������������������������������������������� from neuropathy. Why suffer Stansbury Park Principal Gina room, where she is introduced to Stansbury Elementary on the day ���������������������������������������� with years of misery? Ruiz. “The idea is to unify the her new class by the principal as before school started. ��������������������������������������������� school and consolidate rules into “Mrs. Sarah Jane Hartwell,”their A district-wide decision to hold ������������������������������������������ one catchy word that is easy to new teacher. a back-to-school night for par- remember.” “Everybody is a little nervous ents on the night before school ������������������������������������������ �������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������ To introduce SHINE to stu- on the first day of school,” Wendt started also helped reduce first- ������������������������������������������� dents, Stansbury Elementary said. day of school confusion, accord- �������������������������������������������� teachers star in a comical, but For Stansbury Park Elementary ing to Ruiz. ������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������� serious video, that explains each the first day of school was quiet “Many parents came last night �������������������������������������������� letter. compared to last year, according and had a chance to see where ������������������������������������������� The teachers act out both to Ruiz, who has been the princi- their children’s classrooms are ���������������������������������������� appropriate and inappropriate pal there for three years. and to meet the teachers,” she ������������������������������������� “shining” behavior for students. “Thanks to the boundary said. In Kelly Wendt’s first grade change, we have about 200 less The scene that played out this class, her students were intro- students this year,” she said. morning at Stansbury Elementary Here’s what our patients have to say: duced this morning to her kiva The school board shifted School should be similar to what steps, a two-tiered wooden boundaries to alleviate over- happened throughout Tooele “When I came to see Dr but nothing helped. Since bench. crowding in Stansbury Park’s two County School District’s 16 The kiva creates an intimate elementary schools. The change elementary schools, according Brown I could hardly walk. seeing Dr. Brown my pain area that reduces fidgeting and bussed students from the Benson to Scott Rogers, Tooele County I had horrible nerve pain is gone. I have never been helps increase student engage- Gristmill area that were attend- School District superintendent. ment during story time and other ing Stansbury Park Elementary District-wide over 14,000 stu- down my leg. I had been in treated so wonderfully as I group time, according to Ruiz. to Copper Canyon Elementary in dents headed back to school this pain for 3 years and was so was by the staff at Oquirrh After reviewing the rules for Tooele City. morning, from around 20 stu- bad I could no longer mow Ridge Chiropractic. I highly sitting on the kiva, the students The portables behind the dents in Ibapah to over 1,500 take a seat while Wendt read to school building are not in use students each at Tooele and the lawn. I had tried physi- recommend brokerage chi- them the children’s book, “First this year, Ruiz said. Stansbury High schools. cal to get rid of the pain ropractic.” -Frank Day Jitters.” With an enrollment of 755 [email protected]

CONSULT, EXAM, NECESSARY X-RAYS ��������������������������������������� AND ONE LASER TREATMENT TOOELETRANSCRIPT Oquirrh Ridge Chiropractic / 352 North Main in Tooele, UT BULLETIN Subscribe Today! Call 435-882-7200 AVAILABLE TO THE FIRST 25 CALLERS 58 N. Main Street FEDERAL AND MEDICARE RESTRICTIONS APPLY. 882-0050 TUESDAY August 25, 2015 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN B1

Unless otherwise requested, community news items such as weddings, missionaries, birthdays, babies and The Bulletin • Weddings, Missionaries, Birthdays 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 • Classifieds and Public Notices information contact the Community News Editor at 882-0050 or [email protected]. Items more than one month old Hometown will not be considered for publication.

Bruce Cronwall (above left) sold his hand-carved canes at the park at Lake Point Days on Saturday. Future farmer Ryan Fryer (above middle) gets some tips on operat- ing a tractor from his grandfather, Criss Fryer. Little Miss attendant Shandon Olson (above right) waves from her horse in the Lake Point parade Saturday morning.

Allan and Mauna Jordan reigned as grand marshals at Lake Point Days.

LAKE POINTPHOTOS SUE BUTTERFIELD DAYS

The Lake Point Rockin Riders (far left) rode in the Lake Point Days parade Saturday morning. Aunika Chartier (middle left) tries her skill at the Rocket Surgeon game at the park during Lake Point Days. Brynlee (left) brought her own leash to play at the Lake Point park Saturday.

he citizens of Lake Point celebrated the morning with a parade, followed by a perfor- highlights of their community this past mance by the Lake Point Rockin’ Riders horse T weekend with events including a 5K Fun drill team. Run, a parade, a car show and games in the There was a picnic lunch Saturday in Lake park as part of Lake Point Days. Point Park, as well as the “Man Zone” com- The two-day event began with a Kids Mile petition. Royalty from the Lake Point Pageant and 5K Fun Run along Center Street on Friday also were honored. night, followed by sand volleyball and kickball games. The festivities continued Saturday SEE LAKE POINT PAGE B10 ➤ B2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN TUESDAY August 25, 2015

an eisteddfod? 5. INVENTIONS: Who is cred- ited with inventing the Hula Hoop? by Fifi 6. HISTORY: Who was known Rodriguez as “The Iron Chancellor”? 7. ANIMAL KINGDOM: What 1. GEOGRAPHY: Guadalcanal kind of creature does the is part of which island Australian bandicoot most group in the Pacific resemble? Ocean? 8. RADIO: When did the soap 2. TELEVISION: What was opera “The Guiding Light” Norm’s last name in the begin as a serial show on sitcom series “Cheers”? radio? 3. MOVIES: Which actors 9. MEASUREMENTS: The voiced the two main char- term “vicennial” refers acters, Woody and Buzz, to a period of how many Moments in the “Toy Story” movies? years? 4. ARTS: What country holds a 10. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: festival of music, literature What is the symbol for the in Time and performing arts called zodiac sign Capricorn? THE HISTORY CHANNEL

➤ On Sept. 10, 1608, English adventurer John Smith is elected council president Mega Maze of Jamestown, Virginia — the first permanent English settlement in North America. Smith had won popularity in the colony because of his organizational abili- ties and effectiveness in dealing with local Native American groups.

➤ On Sept. 7, 1813, the United States gets its nick- name, Uncle Sam. The name is linked to Samuel ALL PUZZLE ANSWERS BELOW Wilson, a New York meat packer who supplied bar- rels of beef to the Army “Suburgatory” are joining the during the War of 1812. cast as Liza Warner and Alex Wilson stamped the bar- Davis, respectively. Liza is a rels with “U.S.” for United cop and a member of an anti- States, but soldiers began vigilante task force, while Alex referring to the grub as will be a love interest for Thea. “Uncle Sam’s.” And finally, after much teasing throughout season three, we’ll ➤ On Sept. 9, 1939, audi- finally meet the mysterious ences at the Fox Theater Damien Darhk, who’ll be played in Riverside, California, by Neal McDonough. Season get a surprise showing of Q: Is it true that “Twin Peaks” four of “Arrow” premieres Oct. 7 “Gone With the Wind” as a is coming back on the air? at 8/7c on the CW. second feature. Producer Where and when? Will David • • • David O. Selznick sat in Lynch be involved? — Justin D., Q: I love Tommy Dewey, the back and observed the via email especially his role of Josh A: In order, your answers Daniels on “The Mindy audience reaction to his are: yes, Showtime, hope- Project.” Can you tell me what highly anticipated film. fully sometime next year, and else I can see him in? — Ginger ➤ On Sept. 12, 1940, near yes. Showtime’s head honcho D., via email David Nevins spilled the beans A: Coming in October, you Montignac, France, a col- recently about the reboot, and can watch Tommy in Jason lection of prehistoric cave one of those beans is that David Reitman’s latest project called paintings is discovered Lynch will be there to direct “Casual,” which will air exclu- by four teenagers. The It originally was painted print, there are numerous cop- season three, which will have at sively on Hulu. The story cen- roughly 16,000-year-old black, but has been stripped ies available on online. least nine episodes, with some ters on divorced mom Valerie paintings, mostly of ani- and refinished. I would like to • • • sources reporting as many as 18 (played by Michaela Watkins) mals, are among the finest know more about it. — Teresa, Q: I have a set of lamps that episodes. as she rediscovers herself while examples of art from the Ancramdale, New York are marked “Cordey.” Can you Nevins revealed at the living with her brother, Alex Upper Paleolithic period. A: During the first three tell me anything about them? Television Critics Association (Tommy), and her teenage decades of the past century, — Betty, Marion, Indiana panel this summer: “I never daughter, Laura (Tara Lynne ➤ On Sept. 11, 1965, the Q: I have a collection of Grand Rapids, Michigan, was A: The Cordey China had any doubts we were going Barr). The dry, sometimes-dark, 1st Cavalry Division the Franklin Mint’s Greatest home to at least a dozen com- Company was established to get [David Lynch] back. This dysfunctional-family comedy (Airmobile) begins to Banknotes, in proof-qual- panies that specialized in the in Trenton, New Jersey, in was a huge priority project to will have a 10-episode first arrive in South Vietnam, ity sterling silver. The set has manufacture of furniture and 1942 by Harry Wilson, Harvey me. It became clear that it was season, with a new episode bringing U.S. troop a certificate of authenticity accessories. Your tea cart prob- Greenburg and a small group going to take more than nine released each week (not all at strength to more than signed by Michael C. Boyd, ably was made during the of investors. The company episodes, which was the origi- once like Netflix tends to do). 125,000. The unit was the vice president of public rela- 1920s, and from your photo established a reputation for its nally planned for and budgeted The series will follow the same first full U.S. Army divi- tions at the Franklin Mint. I am appears to be crafted of oak. highly stylized porcelain pieces, length of the series. I really approach as Hulu-exclusive sion deployed to Vietnam. interested in selling. — Larry, Prices vary from region to mostly figurines. Many of the wanted to get David to direct series like “Difficult People” and Weyburn, Sask., Canada region. To find out how much products produced by the com- the whole thing, and he wanted the newly acquired “The Mindy ➤ On Sept. 8, 1974, in a A: I have always advised my your tea cart might be worth, pany before 1950 have become to direct the whole thing. We Project.” controversial execu- readers to steer clear of “instant I suggest you contact antique- quite collectible. had to work out the details.” tive action, President collectibles,” such as the ones and used-furniture dealers near He also teased about whether Write to Cindy at King Gerald Ford pardons his issued by the Franklin Mint. where you live. Write to Larry Cox in care former series stars will be back Features Weekly Service, disgraced predecessor They might be lovely to look A good reference book that of KFWS, 628 Virginia Drive, (as you’ll recall, the series 628 Virginia Drive, Orlando, Richard Nixon for crimes at and delightful to hold, but can provide you with general Orlando, FL 32803, or send e- starred Kyle MacLachlan, Lara FL 32803; or e-mail her at committed while in office the reality is that they are also information about furniture mail to questionsforcox@aol. Flynn Boyle, Richard Beymer, [email protected]. involving the Watergate virtually impossible to sell. from this period and the com. Due to the large volume Sherilyn Fenn and Madchen scandal. Put another way, there are few companies that produced of mail he receives, Mr. Cox Amick, and featured a young © 2015 King Features Synd., Inc. secondary markets for Franklin pieces such as your tea cart is cannot personally answer all David Duchovny): ➤ On Sept. 13, 1990, the Mint products. Furniture of the Depression reader questions, nor does he “You should be drama series “Law & • • • Era: Furniture & Accessories do appraisals. Do not send any optimistic that the Order” premieres on NBC. Q: I have a tea cart that was of the 1920s, 1930s, & 1940s materials requiring return mail. people that you made in Grand Rapids by the by Robert W. and Harriett want will be there, It would go on to become Paalman Furniture Company. Swedberg. Although out of © 2015 King Features Synd., Inc. and there will be one of the longest-run- some surprises in ning prime-time dramas addition. I’m hop- in TV history — 20 sea- narian to make sure he doesn’t long before you discover them. ing we make 2016. sons. The “Law & Order” die of bloat. Why would the You’ll need to monitor the It’s not clear. It’s franchise was created by company present this as cute? dog closely. Bloat, known clini- ultimately going to Dick Wolf, who began his — Shocked in Syracuse, New cally as GDV (gastric dilatation- be in their control. TV career as a writer for York volvulus), happens when a They’re going to “Miami Vice.” DEAR SHOCKED: You don’t dog’s stomach enlarges, twists shoot the whole need me to answer why the pet and puts pressure on surround- thing and then © 2015 King Features Synd., Inc. food company presented the ing organs. It’s a very serious they’ll start posting commercial in that way. Cute condition that can cause death ... but I’m hoping sells, right? in just hours. Overeating is one sooner rather than Because you’re concerned possible cause of bloat. later.” NEWS TIPS: about the way the situation is If your dog’s stomach is • • • 435-882-0050 DEAR PAW’S CORNER: I presented, with no apparent distended, it tries to belch or Q: Can you give watched a “cute” commercial consequences for the puppy vomit without success, it’s me any “Arrow” TOOELETRANSCRIPT ULLETIN today where a toddler sneakily (bloat is a possible risk for dogs weak, panting and salivating, news? — Kylie F., B pours dog food on the floor for that eat a large amount of food rush it to the vet. Baltimore the family puppy to eat. I think in one sitting), you can contact If your pet shows no symp- A: There’s lots it was really irresponsible of the company either through its toms but you’re concerned, of casting news the dog food company to show website or in writing. contact the vet for instructions. for season four, that without noting the risks to Now, what if that situation most recently that dogs that overeat, particularly happened in real life? Your tod- Send your questions about Rutina Welsey of puppies. Maybe a better com- dler gets into the dog food and pet care to ask@pawscorner. “True Blood” and mercial would be the mom sits there happily feeding the com. Parker Young of Kyle MacLachlan rushing the dog to the veteri- family pet, for who knows how © 2015 King Features Synd., Inc. ANSWERS Trivia Test Answers

1. Solomon Islands 6. Otto von Bismarck, 2. Peterson Germany 3. Tom Hanks and Tim 7. A large rat Allen 8. 1937 4. Wales 9. 20 years 5. Richard Knerr and 10. The goat Arthur “Spud” Melin © 2015 King Features Synd., Inc. B3

TUESDAY August 25, 2015 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN B3 MOVIE REVIEWS Fresh young cast revives Cold War themes of ’60s TV show e wasn’t James Bond, but 2013 role of Superman in next if necessary, on opposing sides he was close. year’s Batman v Superman) plays of the ’60s high-stakes political H Napoleon Solo was a Solo, and Armie Hammer (The and military standoff between suave, cosmopolitan American Lone Ranger, The Social Network) the United States and the Soviet secret agent played by actor is his Russian partner Illya Union. Robert Vaughn on the hit NBC TV Kuryakin. Rather than just pick- Their fateful collaboration series The Man From U.N.C.L.E. ing up and running with TV char- makes for the fun in writer/direc- from 1964 to 1968. Solo was in acters established half a century tor Guy Ritchie’s witty, snappy, fact fashioned by writer consul- ago, the movie wisely starts fresh stylish yarn spiced and sprinkled tant Ian Fleming, Bond’s creator, and anew. (We don’t even hear with Nazi fascists, Italian play- to be a small-screen version of the code word “U.N.C.L.E” and boys, atom bombs, speedboats, his more famous British super- learn how it spun off from the femme fatales, fast cars, double spy. CIA, the KGB and other interna- crosses, triple crosses, some You don’t have to know that to tional organizations as a separate very snazzy old-school spy do- enjoy this refreshingly retro-fied super-spook division on its own, daddery, and gorgeous, eye-pop- revival, which takes the name, until the end of the movie.) ping fashions. It sometimes looks characters and Cold War setting We learn backstories and see like the cast of Mad Men left their of the TV show and enhances how Solo and Kuryakin first Madison Avenue ad agency and them to modern-day Hollywood meet—not as teammates but as went into dangerous, daring Euro proportions. enemies, with cloak-and-dagger undercover work. Henry Cavill (who’ll reprise his orders to eliminate each other Alicia Vikander (who drew COWBOYS AND BUFFALOES

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raves as a sexy robot earlier this banter, comic bickering and year in Ex Machina) portrays the constant bouts of spy-vs-spy Frank daughter of a brilliant German one-upmanship keep the movie rocket scientist who’s been moving along crisply. OHLMAN abducted and forced to apply There are certainly louder, M Attorney at Law his skills toward nefarious ends. flashier, bigger spy flicks. If you’re She joins Solo and Kuryakin in a dying for Bond, you’ll get your race—an “arms race,” to use the fix in November with Spectre. FREE Cold War term—to find him. But for a classy, sassy bit of cool, Consultation Elizabeth Debicki is wick- Kennedy-era espionage hijinks, for edly smooth as Victoria, a svelte, this new, revived Man From blond “lethal combination of U.N.C.L.E. certainly delivers Wills & beauty, brains and ambition” plenty of fresh, fun spy kicks— Trusts whose soft, seductive purr and and hints at more to come. pouty smile mask a deadly bite. —Neil Pond, Parade Magazine Veteran British actor Hugh Grant 493 W. 400 N. Tooele makes a welcome impression The Man From U.N.C.L.E. as Waverly, a character whose PG-13 882-4800 motives become clear later in the Starring Henry Cavill, Armie film. Hammer and Alicia Vikander www.tooelelawoffice.com But the movie belongs to Cavill Directed by Guy Ritchie and Hammer, who seem to really enjoy playing off each other in two very different roles: Solo, the ultra-cool, unflappable ladies’ man who can steal almost any- NEED CASH NOW? thing, and Kuryakin, a towering We Want to Make You a Loan! Slavic hunk whose twitchy tem- per makes his bare hands lethal $ $ weapons—and who has trouble 100- 3,000 TODAY! stealing even a single kiss. Their Gentry Finance • 435-843-8680

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Tooele junior Lincoln Powers powers through the Grantsville defense for a first down in Friday’s 50-6 Tooele win. Powers had three rushes for 23 yards and three tackles in the blowout, and also served as the team’s kickoff specialist, averaging 31 yards per kickoff. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BOARD OF EDUCATION OF TOOELE COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT, UTAH GHS LARIATS PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on August 11, 2015, the Board of Education (the “Board”) of Tooele County School District, Utah (the “Dis- trict”) adopted a resolution (the “Resolution”), providing for a Bond Election to be held in the District on Tuesday, November 3, 2015, for the purpose of submitting to the qualified electors of the District the question of the issu- ance of general obligation bonds in an amount not to exceed $49,000,000 (the “Bond Election”) and calling a public hearing to receive input from the public with respect to the issuance of general obligation bonds and the potential eco- nomic impact that the improvement, facility, or property for which the bonds pay all or part of the cost will have on the private sector, pursuant to the Sec- tion 11-14-318 of the Utah Code Annotated 1953, as amended.

PURPOSE FOR THE ISSUANCE OF GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS If approved by eligible voters at the Bond Election, the Board intends to issue general obligation bonds for the purpose of constructing and acquiring one or more school sites, buildings and furnishings and improving existing school property under the charge of the Board and, to the extent necessary, for pro- viding moneys for the refunding, at or prior to the maturity thereof, of general obligation bonds of the Board. FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO The Grantsville High School Lariats perform at the halftime show of Cowboy’s season opener last Friday night. MAXIMUM PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF THE GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS If approved by eligible voters at the Bond Election, the Board intends to issue general obligation bonds in an amount not to exceed $49,000,000, in one or POETRY more series at one or more times. THE TAXES, IF ANY, PROPOSED TO BE PLEDGED ‘Exiting the Night’ The Board proposes to pledge the full faith and credit of the District for the aving been bitten by a our dark companions exiting payment of its general obligation bonds and may be obligated to levy and col- rabid bat I was trying Ted Kooser the night. lect ad valorem taxes sufficient to pay the general obligation bonds, as provided to save from a fire, I’d H U.S. POET LAUREATE, by law. prefer never again to see bats We do not accept unsolicited up close. And here, in this poem 2004-2006 submissions. American Life in by D.R. Goodman, who lives in Poetry is made possible by The California, I get to watch them Poetry Foundation (www.poet- TIME, PLACE AND LOCATION OF PUBLIC HEARING from a safe distance. in crevices and roof-beam ryfoundation.org), publisher of The Board will hold a public hearing at a meeting scheduled to begin at 7:00 beveling, Poetry magazine. It is also support- Exiting the Night doze through our nearly dia- ed by the Department of English at p.m. on September 8, 2015. The public hearing will be held at the District’s By living late, and sleeping metric lives, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. offices, located at 92 Lodestone Way, Tooele, Utah. All members of the public late, we miss Poem copyright ©2014 by D.R. the moment when the bats invisible as brown on brown Goodman, “Exiting the Night,” are invited to attend and participate in the public hearing. Prior to the public come home to roost — — until from Greed: A Confession (Able hearing, written comments may be submitted to the Board, to the attention of when crooked shadows flit in today, wakened by dreams, I Muse Press, 2014). Poem reprinted jagged loops caught a slight, by permission of D.R. Goodman the Business Administrator, 92 Lodestone Way, Tooele, Utah 84074. that seem to seek the chim- compelling corner-glimpse in and the publisher. Introduction ney, seem to miss, gray first light, copyright ©2015 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction’s DATED August 11, 2015 then somehow disappear into of sudden motion in the author, Ted Kooser, served as United the eaves; mostly still States Poet Laureate Consultant in BOARD OF EDUCATION OF TOOELE COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT, UTAH and they (the bats) tuck wing new dawn; and drawn, I rose Poetry to the Library of Congress to fur to wing to see the flight: from 2004-2006. B4 SPORTSB4 SPORTS

B4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN TUESDAY August 25, 2015 Sports

SPORTS WRAP Wall of fame Tooele High School is accepting applications for the Annual Athletic Wall of Fame Induction Ceremony, to be held Sept. 18. Applicants must have graduated from THS at least 10 years ago. Only indi- viduals (not teams) will be consid- ered for the Wall of Fame. Email Athletic Director Catham Beer at [email protected] for an application or pick one up at Tooele High School (301 W. Vine St. Tooele, UT 84074). Application is due by 5 p.m. on Sept. 4. Tooele soccer vs. Taylorsville Senior forward Alle McReavy scored midway through the first half to take a 1-nill advantage over Taylorsville on Friday, but the Warriors scored twice to take the lead before junior keeper Trista Fackrell converted a penalty kick to equalize in the 86th minute. Head coach Stephen Duggan said Tooele “outshot and outplayed them, just couldn’t capitalize.” The draw puts Tooele’s record at 2-2-1. Grantsville soccer at Juab The Cowboys picked up their first win of the season on Thursday with a 3-1 victory over Juab. “We had tons of shots, I think we had 20 to their four,” said head coach Travis Lowry. Sophomore attacking mid- fielder Ashley Wangsgard scored the go-ahead goal, netting a goal in each half. Senior midfielder Kelsey

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Haycock added a third goal in the Grantsville’s AJ Rainer (6) gets brought down (above) by Tooele’s Ryan Brady (4) second half. Lowry said the com- and Blake Paystrup (35) during Friday’s 50-6 Tooele victory. Grantsville backup mittment the upperclassmen have quarterback Coy Johhson (10) passes (below) a ball while being defended by shown during some rough seasons Tooele’s Dawson Vorwaller (65) during the fourth quarter. is starting to pay off. “They’re just Buffaloes stampede excited and have been working really hard,” he said. Grantsville is 1-0 and will face Summit Academy Tooele beats Grantsville in not-so-contested rivalry game on the road Friday before returning home to play Layton Christian on by Tavin Stucki line that looked impenetrable to Idaho State University’s Holt Sept. 3. SPORTS EDITOR Friday, the Buffaloes are poised Arena to face Shelley High School, Tooele volleyball at Waterford to be competitive in the 3AA an Idaho team that is no stranger The Buffaloes rolled over Waterford If Tooele is looking to improve North Region. to big games: The Russets lost in in four sets on Thursday to give upon and outdo its record-set- “The line was excellent,” head the semifinals of the Idaho 3A Tooele its second win of the sea- ting 2014 campaign, Friday’s win coach Kyle Brady said. “I know state tournament to the even- son. Senior middle blocker Sydnee over long-time rival Grantsville our backs had a lot of rushing tual champion last season, and Simmons led the Buffs with 15 has put the Buffaloes on the right yards ... that’s a tribute to the won the title outright in 2013 and kills, and junior outside hitter track. line, right there. If we can do that 2012. Raegen Root chipped in another 11 the rest of the year, I think we’ll After that, Brady has talented with 19 attempts. Senior opposite be OK.” teams like Murray and Maple side hitter Ketrah Dekanich served THS FOOTBALL Brady and Reynolds combined Mountain on the schedule. Later eight aces. Senior middle blocker for 325 offensive yards and three this year, Tooele will face tradi- Abbie Vangrimbergen had six total “We’re not even going to focus touchdowns. Add that to the 98 tionally strong schools in the blocks. Senior libero Elisa Erekson on that,” senior running back yards and three touchdowns region with the likes of Logan had 10 digs. Senior setter Daisy Ryan Brady said. “We’re just going offered by junior running back and Judge Memorial. Brown had 33 sets. The win brings to take one game at a time.” and newcomer-to-significant- Friday’s win over a long-time Tooele to 2-0. The Buffaloes faced The Buffaloes started last sea- playing-time Demetrius Smith, and hated rival undoubtedly felt Kearns on Tuesday, but the game son undefeated through the first the Tooele offense can be a dan- good for everyone on the visitor’s hadn’t been completed as of press six games, but couldn’t man- gerous thing this season. sideline, but how Tooele follows time. Tooele will next face Payson age to win the big-name, big- But Kyle Brady isn’t under any last season’s hot start will depend on the road on Thursday. time games down the stretch to illusions either. His team has yet on the opponents still left on the Grantsville volleyball at Copper advance through the state playoff to prove itself in the aforemen- schedule. Hills bracket. tioned big-name, big-time games, “We’ve got to be prepared for The Cowboys suffered a 3-0 loss This year, with returning and Tooele has plenty of them on the rest of the year,” Kyle Brady to the Grizzlies on Thursday in the stars in Brady and fullback Nate the schedule this season. said. season opener. Grantsville faced Reynolds behind an offensive Friday, the Buffaloes will travel [email protected] Waterford on the road Tuesday, but the match was not complete as of press time. The Cowboys will next play at Hillcrest on Thursday. Cowboy coach looks to Stansbury soccer vs. Dixie Didericksen making her Junior Katrina Clausing and senior Amber Spaulding each had first- bounce back from loss half goals in Stansbury’s 2-1 win over Dixie on Friday. Senior Erin Jones and sophomore Kendall Bell mark on more than just by Tavin Stucki both had assists. The Stallions SPORTS EDITOR improved to 3-0-1 with the win and played Morgan on Tuesday, but the Grantsville head coach Curtis game hadn’t been completed as Ware was understandably disap- of press time. Stansbury will play Stansbury statistic sheet pointed after Friday’s lopsided North Sanpete on Friday at home. 50-6 home-opening loss to long- by Darren Vaughan at least two goals in a game time rival Tooele. 3A and 3AA North football scores COMMUNITY NEWS EDITOR 23 times, including in each of “I think our youth came out,” Ben Lomond 50, Richfield 14 Stansbury’s first three games he said. “We’re all juniors. I’m Logan 38, Box Elder 37 (2OT) Stansbury’s girls soccer this season. going to blame it on the youth.” Park City 51, Union 12 team is undefeated through She scored at least three To add injury to insult, Ware Morgan 14, Bear River 12 its first four games for just the goals in a game seven times said senior quarterback Cody Pine View 30, Judge Memorial 24 FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO second time in school history, during her junior season, Riding separated his shoulder in Emey 57, Summit Academy 44 including a six-game stretch the third quarter. While a doctor Grantsville junior receiver Gavin Eyre Juan Diego 43, West Jordan 33 during which she scored 22 catches a pass in the 50-6 home loss to SHS SOCCER times and a career-best six SEE COWBOYS PAGE 5 ➤ Tooele on Friday. goals in an 8-0 win over Juab posting wins over West, Bear in the opening round of last FROM THE SIDELINES River and Dixie and a 3-3 tie year’s Class 3A state tourna- against Judge Memorial. ment. Her 39 goals were more A major reason for the than 13 Class 3A teams had Stallions’ success is the tal- on their own. She outscored Here’s to my 10th year of prep sports ent of senior striker Michaela Canyon View, Juab, Grantsville Didericksen, who has scored and Union combined. six goals in four matches this Despite her eye-popping s I begin my 10th year cov- pionships. The camaraderie of season after scoring 39 times numbers, Didericksen knows FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO ering high school sports, “It’s the adults teammates who become lifelong as a junior. she can’t do it alone. Stansbury forward and senior captain Athe best part of my job friends. “The nice thing about “I think it’s a whole team Michaela Didericksen is one of the hasn’t changed. that spoil things I was just visiting with the Michaela is that she’s not a effort,” she said follow- state’s top scorers. No, it isn’t the fact that I get quarterback of my high school stat-watcher,” Stansbury ing the Stallions’ tie against paid to watch other people play a when they lose football team this weekend. coach Jeremy Alverson said. Judge Memorial, in which on goal. game. It certainly isn’t the hours. sight of the fact While we won all of one game “Sometimes, coaches and Didericksen and fellow “[Speed] is something I’ve It isn’t even the occasional bit our final two years, that doesn’t media like to look at it and senior and co-captain Amber been working on a lot this of free food. that it is, after matter now. The bond we built say, ‘you know what, that’s Spaulding helped Stansbury past offseason,” she said. “You It’s all about the athletes them- through hundreds of hours and impressive.’ She’s humble, erase a three-goal deficit in have to have fast forwards selves — the kids who are out all, just a game.” thousands of miles logged on bus she’s a Division-I player in her the final 18 minutes. “The and the midfielders putting there giving it their all for little Darren Vaughan trips that took us all over Utah is own right, and it’s nice to have forwards get all the glory for the ball in the right place to more than pride in themselves, the lasting memory. community news editor one of those on our team. The the stats, but I couldn’t do it run on it.” their school and their commu- The bad? Crushing defeats. nice thing about our team is without everyone else on the Alverson said Didericksen’s nity. Losing by inches. Bus trips along that not only do we have one field.” combination of talent and There’s certainly something to For the past 17 years, I’ve been Interstate 70 that resulted in of those, but we have several Didericksen, who also experience is a major help be said for the joy that covering involved in prep sports, whether the brakes starting on fire (yes, other girls around her who are competes as a sprinter for to the Stallions, who have high school sports brings parents as a participant, a freelance that really happened between pushing her in practice and the Stallions’ track team, is preseason games against and grandparents as well. But it reporter or a full-time sports Gunnison and Moab one time). making the other girls better.” a handful for any defense Morgan, North Sanpete and hasn’t been about the adults for writer. I’ve seen it all — the good, Whether it was teams that I Didericksen has 78 goals in because of her speed. She Ben Lomond on the schedule me. In fact, sometimes it’s the the bad and the ugly — both on was on or teams that I’ve cov- 53 career varsity games, and often finds herself surrounded before the Region 10 opener adults that spoil things when and off the field. ered, the end of a season is never has added 15 assists for a total by multiple defenders, leaving Sept. 8 against Tooele. they lose sight of the fact that it The good? Buzzer-beaters. of 171 points. She has scored teammates with open shots [email protected] is, after all, just a game. Thrilling comebacks. State cham- SEE VAUGHAN PAGE 5 ➤ B5

TUESDAY August 25, 2015 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN B5 Buffaloes beat up Pirates in preseason finale THE PIANO WORKSHOP senior squad. Serving Tooele County “A lot of our girls haven’t Team undefeated THS SOCCER been playing competition soc- Call today to schedule your at home through cer, they’re just starting,” Banks complimentary evaluation Cyprus defender after a failed said. “We’ve been practicing three challenges attempt to clear the defending through the summer and yeah. 435-830-5345 third, and buried a one-on-one They’ve just seen a really big by Tavin Stucki attempt to double the score. improvement.” • free piano evaluation and a free cost SPORTS EDITOR Sophomore midfielder With the win, Tooele estimate for any work requested McKenna Banks said the secret improved to 2-2 before the • tuning and voicing By looking at the stat sheet, to scoring the goals was off-ball draw at home to Taylorsville • replacement of broken or chipped keys Tooele should have beaten movement. on Friday. The Buffs will take Cyprus by a lot more than just “Just leave your defender and a few days off before travel- • repair or replacement of missing or three goals. they can’t get you,” she said. ing to Morgan at 3:30 p.m. on broken strings In the first half alone, the “Just score, tap it in, that’s it.” Thursday. The next home game • any other needed mechanical repairs Buffs had 10 shots on frame, In the 65th minute, Russell will be against Stansbury on or adjustments but only found the back of the earned her second assist of the Sept. 8, which will also serve net once in the 4-1 win over the day when she found sopho- as the Region 10 opener for the We Can Make Your Sad Pirates on Thursday. more Kaitlin Asay on another Buffs. Piano Happy Again “We had great runs outside, corner for a header on the left [email protected] THE PIANO WORKSHOP really great runs outside, but side. the end product hasn’t been “[Kaitlin] kept making real- there,” said first-year head ly great crosses, and without coach Stephen Duggan. her no one could have scored,” NEED CASH NOW? Cyprus scored first, with the Banks said. goal coming from a corner kick Sophomore Madelyn Tate We Want to Make pass that was pushed into the added the final goal seconds You a Loan! net by a northerly wind in the before the final whistle with a $ $ 15th minute. step-through shot from about 100- 3,000 TODAY! “As a keeper, there’s nothing 10 yards from the goal after Noble Finance you can do about that,” Duggan a cross came in from the left 435-843-1255 told his team during halftime. side. But the lead didn’t last long. Duggan said he was pleased Sophomore midfielder Emily with the improvement his team Webber scored in the 6-yard has made in the still-young box on a corner kick served in season. Join the Club! by sophomore forward Sydney “Have we played better than Russell to make it 1-1 in the our first three games? Absolutely 21st minute. we have,” Duggan said. Tooele Club Russell created her own It’s no surprise all the goals 438 W 400 N FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Tooele Annual Tooele’s Sydney Russell (13) congratulates Madelyn Tate (15) with a hug after Tate goal in the 44th minute when in Thursday’s match came from Teen Center Membership scored a goal against Cyprus in Thursday’s 4-1 win. she stole the ball away from a underclassmen in Tooele’s two- Boys & Girls 102 N 7th St. Tooele, UT 84074 $10$ Club 435.843.5719 Stallions beat North Sanpete in opener Homework Help | Computers | Games | Arts | and More! by Tavin Stucki expecting to be a blowout win. ered one. Sophomore linebacker Afterschoolol SPORTS EDITOR SHS FOOTBALL It may not have been the pretti- Kyle Mckenna blocked one punt. est, but a win is what Stansbury Senior kicker Tarl Lewis was a per- programs forfor A last-second field goal wasn’t needed this season after last year’s fect 3-3 in point-after attempts, to be on Friday in Mt. Pleasant Roberts caught a 32-yard touch- heartbreaking 49-42 loss to Dixie knocking one in during the sec- Youth andd Teens when Stansbury won the season- down pass from quarterback in the 3AA state playoffs and being ond, third and fourth quarters ages 6 - 18.8. When School opener over North Sanpete 21-19. Colton Christiansen. Christiansen decimated by graduation. each. is The Club Stansbury sophomore fullback completed two of six passes for Senior linebacker Jordan The win is Stansbury’s first of is In! McCoy Didericksen rushed a 42 yards and was intercepted Roberts led the team in tackles with the season, and Stansbury’s per- Out team-high 16 times for 127 yards once. The senior also rushed for seven, one of which was for a loss. fect season will be on the line at and a pair of touchdowns to sup- 90 yards. Christiansen and senior defensive 7 p.m. on Friday when the team TooeleClub.org port the Stallions in the ground The Stallions gained 342 yards lineman Brennen “Spike” Calder faces Salem Hills in the home game. of total offense, but turned the each forced a fumble, and junior opener. Junior running back Casey ball over twice in what some were linebacker Matt McIntyre recov- [email protected] Your Complete TOOELETRANSCRIPT Local News Source. Park City takes lead in region golf race by Tavin Stucki Mitchell Schow shot a 69 to take his team’s top performer with SPORTS EDITOR second. an 87. Park City had five golfers in Tooele placed second in the Jerzee Houston shot a sea- the top 10 on Wednesday, and team competition with a total son-best 4-under-par 68, but as a team shot a 288, which was stroke count of 298, Union took Park City took another team win 10 strokes better than Tooele’s third with 316, Stansbury fourth to take the lead in the Region second-place mark. with 317 and Grantsville fifth 10 golf race on Wednesday at Tooele senior Braxton Quin with 372. Only Stansbury Park. took fourth in the round with Park City leads the season race Full Color Houston extended his lead an even-par 72, and senior with 23 points, Tooele in second on the individual champion Brayden Boswell tied for eighth with 22, Union third with 15, run. The Buffalo senior’s sea- with Union’s Blake Riding with Stansbury fourth with 10 and son total stroke count is 351, scores of 77. Stansbury’s Derrick Grantsville in fifth with 5. ¢ followed by Park City’s Drew Ho and Parker Buys rounded The next competition will Fleming. Fleming shot 1-under out the top 11 by tying for 10th be Thursday at Park Meadows Copies! on Wednesday to finish third with 78s on their scorecards. Country Club in Park City. in the round, and fellow Miner Grantsville’s Riley Jensen was [email protected] 19Per Copy

Cowboys GHS FOOTBALL thinks the season will go up from here. continued from page 4 of zero yards and lost a fumble. He “It hurts pretty bad,” he said. had six tackles and intercepted a “We’ve just got to tighten up our appointment this week may say red-zone pass from Tooele quar- defense.” otherwise, it’s an injury that could terback Carver Jaramillo, return- Junior Riley Smith matched take as long as six weeks to heal. ing it 30 yards shortly before the Eyre with nine receptions of his But there were positives in the first half ended. own, but only had 47 yards. game. Ware and the rest of the The Cowboys had more rush- “We made three great defensive Grantsville coaching staff named ing attempts (26) than rushing plays right at the beginning of the Riding the player of the game. yards (25) and finished the first second half,” Ware said. “I don’t It was actually the Grantsville half with minus-6 rushing yards think our offense, for a brand-new passing game that saved the combined. offense, I don’t think it looked that Cowboys at all. Junior receiver “We made them look pretty bad. It was able to move the ball a Gavin Eyre was the face of that good,” Ware said of Tooele. “I few times.” show, pulling down nine catches think they’re as good as they were Riding completed 9-of-18 for a total of 74 yards and the tonight.” passes for 99 yards, a touchdown team’s only touchdown — a 25- Grantsville will next face Juab and an interception in the game yarder that came less than a min- on the road, a team that beat before being injured on a 4-yard ute into the second quarter. Millard 34-13 on the road last scramble to the left sideline short- Eyre, who understandably week. Kickoff is scheduled for 7 ly before the third quarter ended. wasn’t much for words on the p.m. in Nephi. He rushed nine times for a net gain sideline after the game, said he [email protected]

team of choice. ter how disappointing it might Vaughan Sometimes, the other team is be. Let’s remember that while TOOELE just better. Ask the kids some- coaches are supposed to win continued from page 4 RANSCRIPT times, and they’ll admit it them- games, their true value at this T easy. When you’re dealing with selves. High school sports are level comes from what they teach Bring in Your teenagers, a season-ending loss supposed to provide a way to their players about being solid, Digital Files always feels like the end of some- teach valuable life lessons, and productive citizens once their BULLETIN thing more. But when you either one of those is how to handle final game has been played. attend a small school or you’re failures, be accountable and Let’s remember that the teen- covering small schools, that’s bounce back from them. ager taking snaps at quarterback immediately followed by the start If we as adults are making is doing the best he can, even 58 N. Main • Tooele of the next sports season with a excuses, what does that teach the if he may not be the second lot of the same kids involved. younger generation? Not much, coming of Brett Favre or Peyton 8:30 am to 5:30 pm • Monday – Friday The ugly? Parents writing let- beyond the idea that every failure Manning. ters to the paper blasting the or shortcoming is someone else’s Let’s make the 2015-16 athletic 8.5 x 11 inch • 20# bond paper 17-year-old starting quarterback fault. That’s not a good prec- year a memorable one for our Some restrictions apply and calling for the head coach edent, to say the least. local student-athletes, and for all to be fired. Adults coming out of With the Friday night lights the right reasons. the stands to confront officials having made their debut last during the middle of a basketball week and the soccer, volleyball Darren Vaughan is a veteran game. and tennis seasons kicking into sports writer from Moab, Utah. Look, I get it. Everyone wants gear, let’s all remember the good He may not have had many Highest Quality to see their own kid succeed, and things about high school sports triumphs in his brief, undistin- State-of-the-Art it’s hard to be objective in those and why the experience these guished athletic career, but he has Color Printing moments. I’m as big a sports athletes are getting is so valuable. become a connoisseur of press- fan as you will ever find, and I’ll Let’s not focus so much on box food, and that’s got to count Equipment! admit to being a bit overzealous what the scoreboard says when for something. Email him at dvau when it comes to defending my that clock strikes zero, no mat- [email protected]. B6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN TUESDAY August 25, 2015 The Bulletin Board

South in Tooele. Please enter through completion of the class. For more infor- Brit-Ammi Kahal also accepted if new. Donations can effort to raise the profile of local flau- visit www.foodaddicts.org. Everyone is Tooele the south side doors. mation, call Gene at 882-4767 or Bryan Covenant People Assembly are teach- be turned in to the volunteer desk at tists. If you love to play the and welcome to attend. at 882-6795. ing the Hebrew roots of the Christian Mountain West Medical Center, 2055 N. want to grow your musical horizons, Senior Center Grantsville Elementary School faith. Visitors welcome on Saturdays at Main St. in Tooele. Call Diane at (435) please join us! All levels of skill and Tooele County Aging The senior center is for the enjoyment of Grantsville Elementary will be holding 1 p.m., 37 S. Main Street, Tooele. Call 843-3691 with any questions. experience welcome. Contact Emma at Tooele County Aging is looking for vol- all seniors 55 and older. New and excit- elections for the Community Council Gardening (435) 843-5444 for more information. [email protected]. unteers to help us meet the needs of ing activities include bridge, pinochle, during Back to School Night on Aug. 24, seniors in the community. Many seniors 2015. The meeting will be held at 6:30 Tooele Valley Free Masons require assistance and need rides to bingo, exercise program, line dancing, Tooele Valley Beekeeping Club Bible Baptist Church Moose Lodge wood carving, Wii games, watercolor p.m. in the school library. If you would We would like to invite you to a good The Tooele Valley Free Masons meet doctors or other health professionals. The club meets the second Wednesday class, movies and health classes. like to be nominated, please notify Mr. old-fashioned revival with some blue- the second Friday of each month for Rides help seniors live more indepen- of each month during the active bee- Meals on Wheels available for home- Zaleski at 884-9991. Nominations will grass music and old-fashioned preach- Meals at the Lodge dinner and socializing. If you are inter- dent lives. Call Holly at (435) 843-4102 keeping season from 7-8:30 p.m. at bound. Lunch served weekdays. For age also be open at the meeting. Voting will ing every night at 7 p.m. at Bible Baptist Friday and Saturday night dinners will ested or have questions please join us for more information. The Grantsville Tractor Supply Company, located at 60 and above, suggested donation is take place at the meeting as well as Church, located at 286 N. 7th Street in be served from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday at the Lodge, located at the corner of and Tooele Senior Centers also are in the corner of SR 36 and SR 138 in $3. For those under age 60, cost is $5. Aug. 25-27. Parent members must have Tooele. Contact Pastor Sinner at (435) night dinners include clam chowder or Settlement Canyon Road and SR 36, or need of volunteers. For more informa- Stansbury Park. Open to all and free Transportation available to the store or a child at the school for at least one of 840-2152. homemade soup, and/or fish baskets give us a call at (435) 277-0087. tion about volunteering at the Grantsville of charge, come and learn from both doctor visits for residents in the Tooele the two years of their term. (halibut, shrimp), or chicken strips. Center, call Dan at (435) 843-4753. For experts and fellow hobbyists about the and Grantsville areas. For transporta- Mountain View Baptist Church Saturday night dinners include 12-ounce Tooele Valley Family History volunteering at the Tooele Center, call exciting world of beekeeping. A wide tion information call (435) 843-4102. Stansbury High School We would like to invite you to discover ribeye or T-bone steak with choice of Center Debbie at (435) 843-4103. range of topics and equipment will be For more information about the Tooele The Stansbury High School Community what God’s plan and purpose is for baked potato/fries, salad and roll; Research your ancestors free with discussed in meetings, and will coordi- center, call (435) 843-4110. Council is accepting nominations to fill your life. The Bible contains all of the halibut or salmon steak with choice of trained FamilySearch volunteers at the Life’s Worth Living Foundation three parent positions for the 2015-16 nate with typical beekeeping activity that answers for life’s questions. Come baked potato or fries, salad and roll, Tooele Valley Family History Center, Suicide support group every third school year. Each position is a two-year is happening in that month. For more and join us this Sunday for our adult or Jumbo shrimp with choice of baked 751 N. 520 East, Tooele. Phone (435) Thursday at 7 p.m. at the TATC, located Grantsville term. To be eligible, you must have information, contact Jay Cooper at (435) Bible study and graded Sunday School potato or fries, salad and roll. All meals 882-1396. Hours of operation: Tuesday at 88 S. Tooele Blvd., Tooele. If you at least one student currently attend- 830-1447 or [email protected]. which starts at 9:45 a.m. Our worship are for a reasonable price. No orders through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. struggle with suicidal thoughts or have ing Stansbury High School. If you are are taken after 8:45. Daily lunch spe- lost a loved one to suicide, please plan Free Plant Diagnostic Clinic service begins at 11 a.m. We also have Tuesday and Thursday evenings 7-9 p.m. Family History Center interested in being a candidate or would a Bible study time each Sunday at 6 cials are available at the lodge from 11 Wednesday evenings by appointment on attending. Please go on Facebook This clinic is provided by the Tooele Greet your ancestors free at the like to nominate a candidate, please p.m. We meet on Wednesdays at 7 a.m. After purchase of 10 (ten) meals only. Special classes offered regularly. and like our page to keep current with County Master Gardeners. Have a Grantsville Family History Center, 117 email Cyndie Kirk at cyndiekirk@yahoo. p.m. for prayer time. Bring your needs either Friday/Saturday nights you get Call the center for more information. our latest news and events. Contact us problem with a plant, shrub, tree in E. Cherry St. All are welcome, with com. The nomination deadline is and let us pray together for God’s help. a free one. If you have more than four on that page. lifesworthlivingfoundation. your landscape? Not sure if a pest is consultants there to assist you. Open Monday, Aug. 31, 2015. Elections will Mountain View Baptist Church meets at people in your party, please call ahead Take Off Pounds Sensibly com. the cause, or watering or something Mondays noon to 4 p.m., and Tuesday be held from Sept. 1-11, 2015. The the Eastgate Plaza in Grantsville, Suite to ensure the cook can plan better. For Give yourself the gift of health and in the soil? You can get some great through Thursday noon to 4 p.m. and 7 first community council meeting will be 2C. Join us. members and their guests only. wellness. Resolve to lose those extra DAV Chapter 20 to 9 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2015, at 7 p.m. advice, at no charge. The clinic is held pounds. TOPS can help you achieve your The DAV will hold its monthly EC meet- every Wednesday from 3-6 p.m. at the Stansbury Park Baptist Church Live music goals and support you in your journey. ing from 7:30-8 p.m. on the third Senior Center Tooele Junior High School USU Extension Office, 151 N. Main. in Please join us each Sunday morning at On Friday, Sept. 18, Bent Fender will be We provide accountability through week- Thursday of each month at the Pioneer The senior center is for the enjoyment Nominations are now being accepted Tooele. Bring your sample in and get 10 a.m. for Worship Services and Bible playing. On Saturday, Sept. 19, Wilson ly weigh-ins and support and encourage- Museum. The general membership of all seniors age 55 and older. For info, for the Tooele Junior High School some answers! Study at the Stansbury Park Clubhouse and Harris Band will be playing during ment in a non-judgmental environment. meeting will follow from 8-9 p.m. In call (435) 884-3446. Activities include Community Council. There are three (next to the SP Swimming Pool). For the Tri-Lodge weekend at Camp Wapiti TOPS is open to all men, women, teens addition, the DAV is looking for three Bunco, exercise programs, bingo, vacant parent seats. Any parent or details, please call us at (435) 830- from 7-11 p.m. For members and their and preteens. There are now two TOPS volunteer drivers. No DAV membership ceramics, pinochle, movies and wood guardian of a current Tooele Junior Churches 1868 or go to www.stansburyparkbc.org. guests only. chapters in Tooele to accommodate your is required. Will need a VA physical. Call carving, etc. Meals on Wheels available High School student is eligible to run. If schedule. UT 330 Tooele meets Tuesday Curtis Beckstrom at (435) 840-0547 or for homebound. Lunch served week- you are interested in being nominated, First Lutheran Church Golf scramble at Cornerstone Baptist Church, 276 E. Ross Curley at (801) 641-9121. days. For age 60 and above, suggested The Church of Jesus Christ of The Steve Bevan Memorial Patriot’s Day please contact the office no later than Latter-day Saints First Lutheran Church, on the corner of 500 North. Weigh in from 5:30-6 p.m., donation is $3. For those under age 60, Sept. 4, 2015, so that ballots can 7th and Birch, would like to invite you golf scramble will take place at Oquirrh meeting at 6 p.m. Call Mary Lou at Parkinson’s Disease Support cost is $5. Transportation available to be prepared. Candidate names will To find a meeting house and time of to hear of God’s grace and the love of Hills Golf Course on Sunday, Sept. 13 Group worship for The Church of Jesus Christ (435) 830-1150 for information. UT 365 the store or doctor visits for residents be posted on Sept. 8 on the school’s Christ, who died to forgive you of your with an 8 a.m. shotgun start. Tooele meets Saturday at 10 a.m. at Meetings will be held every third Friday in the Tooele and Grantsville areas. For website and at the office. The election of Latter-day Saints, go to mormon.org sins and attain salvation on your behalf. of the month at 1 p.m. Tooele Applied and click the “Find a Meetinghouse” link Tri-Lodge weekend the Bit n Spur Clubhouse, 240 W. 500 transportation information, call (435) will be held at Tooele Junior High during Worship is at 6 p.m. on the first, third North. This chapter will meet occasion- Technology College (TATC) has gener- 843-4102. business hours (7:45 a.m.-3 p.m.) on or contact (435) 850-2037. and fourth Sundays of the month and at The fourth annual Tri-Lodge (Elks, ously donated their beautiful boardroom Eagles and Moose) weekend is sched- ally at a private residence, so call ahead Sept. 8-10. If you have any questions Adult religion class 10 a.m. on all other Sundays. Sunday for the exact location. Call Lisa at (435) for the meetings. This is a very comfort- Grantsville Irrigation about the council or the election, please uled from Friday, Sept. 18 through Jesus Christ and the Everlasting Gospel school at 11:15 a.m. 882-1442 for information. Also see the able setting with ample seating and ADA Grantsville Irrigation agricultural users contact principal Bill Gochis at (435) Sunday, Sept. 20 at Camp Wapiti in — every Wednesday evening from Sept. TOPS website at www.tops.org. access, located at 88 S. Tooele Blvd. have been issued a third turn for the 833-1921. New Life Christian Fellowship Settlement Canyon. There will be camp- 2-Nov. 18 from 7-8:30 p.m. at the in Tooele (west end of Vine Street). season. Residential allotment has been We invite you to worship and serve sites available as well as food, drinks Tooele Gem and Mineral Rock For more information, you may contact Grantsville Seminary, 115 E. Cherry St. and entertainment. increased to 250,000 gallons per share. Tooele Adult Education Jesus with us. Our clothing closet and Club Barbara Royal at barbcroyal55@hotmail. We would like to thank the citizens of Registration for Tooele Adult Education Tuition is $18 per course. Register at food pantry is open from noon to 3 Tooele Gem and Mineral Rock Club will com or (801) 656-9673. Look for our Grantsville for their efforts to conserve will be Aug. 24-28 from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. at the door. p.m. every Tuesday to Thursday at 411 Annual convention resume its regular meetings on the booth in the upcoming Senior Expo in water. Please continue to monitor your the Community Learning Center (CLC). E. Utah Ave. Programs for kids, teens, The Idaho/Utah Moose Association Berean Full Gospel Church second Tuesday of the month starting September. use for the remainder of the season. Coursework begins on Aug. 31. The women and men are also available Annual Convention is scheduled for We invite you to discover how God’s with Tuesday, Sept. 8 at 7:30 p.m. at “Like” us on Facebook for updates on CLC is located at 211 S. Tooele Blvd., every week. Sunday services are at our Sept. 24-27 at the lodge in Twin Falls, Word can transform your life and provide the Tooele Applied Technology College Living Well Class the system. Tooele, Utah. The cost is $100 for the Tooele building at 9 a.m., 11 a.m. and Idaho. Call the lodge or stop by to Come attend a free, six-week class on you with the answers for questions and (TATC), 88 S. Tooele Blvd., Tooele. Come year. 1:30 p.m. Come join us. Find out more register. how to live well with chronic conditions for problems you may be struggling to learn about rocks, minerals and ways to Daughters of Utah Pioneers by calling 843-7430 or visiting www. or live with someone who has long-term overcome. Come join us this Sunday craft with them and enjoy field trips for The DUP is seeking any family histories, NLOT.org. health concerns. Classes will be held morning for our 10 a.m. worship service rock collecting. Membership is $10 per photographs, books, stories or vintage Eagles on Thursdays through Sept. 3, 1 p.m. to TATC where we will assemble in praise, share year. Our annual rock show will be Sept. artifacts (before 1900) to display at Tooele Christian Fellowship 3:30 p.m., at the Tooele County Health testimonies and explore worship in ways 25-27 at the Dow James Building, 400 our DUP Grantsville Museum, located Sunday School 9:45 a.m., Worship Sunday breakfasts Department building. Promoted by the at 378 W. Clark St. (in the basement Commercial Driver’s License that strive to highlight the greatness of N. 400 West, in conjunction with the Service 11 a.m. Services are held at 40 There is a breakfast served each Tooele County Health Department. Call of the J. Reuben Clark Farmhouse God. After our morning praise and wor- Mountain Man Rendezvous. Admission Program N. Main, former Stowes Family Music Sunday from 9 a.m.-noon. There is a (435) 277-2454 to register for this across from the Grantsville Cemetery). ship time, we enter into a one-hour Bible is free. Visit us on Facebook or our Now enrolling for CDL. Join us for a building. For more information, call special every Sunday for $5 per person class. For more information, call Ellen Yates Study at 11 a.m. Attend with us Sunday website at www.tooelegem.com. For comprehensive six-week course that will (435) 224-3392 or www.tooelechristian- and you can order off the menu for $7 at (435) 884-0253 or Coralie Lougey mornings at 635 N. Main St. (Phil’s more information, call (435) 882-5752 teach you everything you need to know fellowship.org. Parking and entrance in per person or $3 for seniors who order Stansbury Art and Literary at (435) 884-3832. Visit www.grants- Glass), or call (435) 578-8022 for more or email TooeleGemandMineral@gmail. to pass the CDL test. Cost of program back of building. very few items or for kids age 11 and Society Artist of the Month villedupmuseum.com or www.explore- information. com. is only $2,365. You will receive 120 under. The breakfast includes one glass Fiona Kahlo is the Stansbury Art and tooele.com. Tooele First Assembly hours driving time and get one-on-one of juice or milk and coffee with refills. Lit Chamber Wall Gallery artist for the United Methodist Church Sunday school at 10 a.m., morning Sons of Utah Pioneers training from our experienced instructor. Bad beer is available and the food is month of August. Behind every piece Tooele United Methodist Church ser- worship at 11 a.m. Spanish services: The goal of the Sons of Utah Pioneers Register today! (435) 248-1800 or visit delicious. Public invited. Fiona Viola Kahlo creates is a story or vices are held on Sundays at 11 a.m. Escuela dominical a las 2 p.m., y el ser- Settlement Canyon Chapter is to keep Stansbury Park tatc.edu. concept filled with symbolism, hope and Please check our website, tooelecumc. vicio general a las 3 p.m. Services are our pioneer heritage alive. We do this Steak nights a healing message. The very essence Nail Technician Program org, or call Tooele UMC’s office at 882- held at 127 N. 7th Street. through histories, stories, artifacts, On Aug. 28, the dinner special is a rib- of Kahlo’s work is the visual narrative Restoration at Benson Now enrolling. You can finish and get 1349. We are located at 78 E. Utah monuments, museums, service and eye steak for $15. it reveals. Each viewer will ultimately Gristmill licensed and start making money in Ave. in Tooele. Tooele Springs Calvary Chapel scholarships. Much of this labor of take away his or her own understanding The Historic Benson Gristmill as little as four months at a low cost. A verse-by-verse study of God’s word. love is found in the Tooele Pioneer Church of Christ of the piece. Some experiences in life Restoration Committee is seeking The nail program hours are Monday- Sunday service at 10 a.m. Wednesday Museum at 47 East Vine in Tooele, as Church of Christ meets at 430 W. Utah simply cannot be expressed with words. donations from individuals, groups, and Thursday, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Call us (435) night Bible study and youth groups at Elks well as various statues and monuments Ave. Bible class, Sunday at 10 a.m. Kahlo’s artwork serves as the vehicle businesses to help with restoration 248-1800 or stop by 88 South Tooele 7 p.m. Men’s, women’s and couple’s around the county. The Tooele Pioneer and worship from 11 a.m. to noon. to convey the emotional side of life’s efforts and the operation of the historic Blvd. Bible studies. Hunting and equestrian Friday night dinners Cemetery at the mouth of Settlement Gristmill site. Donations may be sent to Wednesday Bible class at 7 p.m. We fellowship ministries available. Child Dinner will be served each Friday night Canyon is another of our projects. We journey. This artwork will be available for Tooele County Benson Gristmill Fund, Industrial Maintenance seek to be the Lord’s church estab- care provided at all services. For more from 6-9 p.m. The menu includes a are always looking for artifacts and his- the public to view at the Tooele County 47 S. Main Street, Tooele, Utah 84074. Program lished about 33 AD. Jesus is our only information, check out our Facebook T-bone for $16.50; halibut for $16.50; tories as a loan or gift to be displayed Chamber of Commerce, 153 S. Main, head of the church, headquarters are during their regular business hours. For more information contact Mike (602) TATC offers a 900-hour Industrial page or visit www.tooelesprings.org. rib-eye steak for $13; shrimp for $12; for everyone’s benefit at the Tooele heaven. Come and grow with us. Call 826-9471. Maintenance Training Program where To hear Bible teaching, download our steak and shrimp for $12; fish and Pioneer Museum. If you are interested (435) 882-4642. Stansbury Art and Literary you can learn about maintaining and mobile app. 47 N. Main Street, (435) chips for $10 or chicken breast for $10. in the values of honoring past and operating industrial-type machinery. This 962-9427. All items above include your choice of future pioneers and in visiting their Society Cornerstone Baptist The next meeting of the Stansbury Art career is in high demand, and skills are baked potato, French fries or rice pilaf historical settings and learning more Ophir Passion for God, compassion for people and Literary Society will be Tuesday, needed nationwide — if you have an and soup or salad bar. about those who settled and shaped at 276 E. 500 North in Tooele, phone: Aug. 25 at 7 p.m. at the Tooele Applied analytical mind and like to solve prob- Utah, attend our business and educa- Park reservations (435) 882-6263. Come as you are this Charity Technical College, 88 Tooele Blvd., lems, you might find this to be a great Ribeye steaks tion meeting the first Thursday of each There are some open dates for reserva- Sunday, where you can hear a message Tooele. The presenter for the meeting fit. Stop by the campus today to learn Ribeye steaks will be served Friday, Aug. month. A potluck dinner followed by tions at Ophir Town Park. Groups only. from the Bible and meet new friends. Tooele Children’s Justice will be Andrew Garbowitz, currently a about this exciting program, call the 28 from 6-9 p.m. for $13. various presentations starts promptly No individual space reservations are Service times: Bible study (for all ages) fourth-grade teacher in Tooele County campus for more information at (435) Center at 6:30 p.m. in the new TATC Center at available. Limited dates available for 9:45 a.m.; morning worship 11 a.m.; Thursday night pizza and author of “The Silent King,” a fan- 248-1800. Tooele Children’s Justice Center is in 88 So. Tooele Blvd. Call Jerry Henson at 2015, more for the 2016 season. Call evening worship 6 p.m.; WiseGuys chil- need of DVD-Rs, soda, bottled water Come get all the pizza you can eat every (435) 882-4917 for more information. tasy novel. He is going to speak on his Betty Shubert at (435) 882-5701. Note dren’s program 6 p.m. Nursery provided and snacks. We appreciate all dona- Thursday from 6-8 p.m. Cost is $6. passion for fantasy and how he came to that this is a new phone number. for all services, and children’s church tions. For inquiries or drop-off call (435) Mood disorder support group write this fantasy story. The theme for Education during morning worship. WiseGuys 843-3440. 25 S. 100 East, Tooele. Monday night dinners Do you or someone you love have a the August meeting optional project is Program during evening worship. Monday night dinners will begin Sept. mood disorder? NAMI-Tooele affiliation HATS. This can be done in the medium United Methodist dinner 14. More info to come. Lake Point Online courses Mountain of Faith Lutheran offers help, hope and healing. Please of your choice. The public is invited and Online courses in Network+ and Tooele United Methodist church offers join us for support group sessions every refreshments will be served. Remember We’re a healthy, growing congregation Meetings Security+ IT are designed for the IT pro- a free dinner every Wednesday. Coffee Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. at the New to visit the Chamber Wall Gallery. The Lake Point Cemetery who welcomes newcomers and reaches Lodge meetings are held the second fessional seeking to upgrade their skills and social hour starts at 4 p.m. and Reflection Clubhouse on 900 South in Artist for the Month of August is Fiona In 1877, Absolom Yates donated prop- out to those in need. Join us for worship and fourth Tuesday of every month. and knowledge of networking and secu- dinner is served from 5-6 p.m. All are Tooele. For more info, contact Kelly at Kahlo. erty for a cemetery in E. T. City. This Sunday mornings at 10 a.m., 560 S. rity, and prepares you for the CompTIA welcome. House committee meetings are held 841-9903. is the location of our present-day Lake Main, Tooele. We treat the word of God every third Tuesday of the month. All Point Cemetery. To commemorate this Network+ and Security+ exams. Call the Yoga by Yerzhan with respect without taking ourselves too The Tooele Valley Resource members are welcome and encouraged Caregiver Support Group Yoga by Yerzhan, a professional certified event and to acknowledge his life and TATC at (435) 248-1800 for more infor- seriously. Check us out on Facebook by to attend. Join us the third Monday of each month yoga instructor with 25 years experi- contribution to our community, a head- mation or to enroll. Center searching for Mountain of Faith Lutheran from 2-3 p.m. at Mountain West Medical ence, is it the Tooele Valley Academy stone/memorial is being constructed The Tooele Valley Resource Center is Adult education Church. Please join us for meaningful Center, 2055 N. Main St. in Tooele. of Dance, 291 N. Main, Tooele, Utah. for his gravesite. Taylor Bott from Troop currently in need of donations. Please Get your high school diploma this year. worship that is also casual and relaxed. The Tooele County Health Department’s Mondays from 7-8 p.m. beginning Aug. 324 in Salt Lake has chosen this for consider donating items such as deodor- Tooele County All classes required for a high school For more information, call (435) 882- Aging Services program is the sponsor 24. For more information, contact his Eagle Scout project. He is asking for ant, chapstick, lotion, diapers, formula, diploma, adult basic education, GED 7291. Historical Society for these Alzheimer’s Association’s Patricia at (435) 843-7060 or (801) donations. Checks should be made out toilet paper, shampoo, conditioner, preparation and English as a second Caregiver Support Groups. The groups 750-7172. to Nu Art Memorial Co. To make a dona- combs and brushes. Cash is also language are available. Register now St. Barnabas’ Episcopal Historical books are designed to provide emotional, tion call or send to one of the following: Weekly service of word, prayer and sac- welcomed. Those who receive services to graduate — just $50 per semester. Tooele County Historical Society’s books educational and social support for care- THS Class of 1965 Reunion Taylor Bott, (801) 971-1595; Allan rament followed by fellowship. Sunday include individuals or families in crisis, Located at 211 Tooele Blvd., call (435) will be available to purchase at our givers. They help participants develop The Tooele High School Class of 1965 Jordan, (801) 250-9364, 7852 N. Mtn. mornings at 10 a.m. St. Barnabas’ the homeless and families at risk of 833-8750. Adult education classes are meeting. The History of Tooele County methods and skills to solve problems. will have its 50th class reunion Aug. View Rd., Lake Point, UT 84074; Lori Episcopal Church, 1784 N. Aaron Drive, becoming homeless. Located 23 S. for students 18 and over. Volume II is $30, The Mining, Smelting, The meetings encourage caregivers to 28-29. There will be a casual social Young (801) 250-0366, 7840 N. Mtn. Main Street, (435) 843-4761. Tooele. Phone: (435) 882-4721. Email: and Railroading in Tooele is $20, and maintain their own personal, physical Friday evening, Aug. 28, at 6 p.m. View Rd., Lake Point, UT 84074. ESOL [email protected]. Web at First Baptist Food Pantry we also have eight note cards depicting and emotional health, as well as opti- at Charlotte’s, 201 Country Club in ESOL conversational classes are www.stbarnabasepiscopal.org. You are The First Baptist Church in Tooele is four different pioneer buildings for $4. mally care for the person with dementia. Stansbury Park, (801) 209-9318. Drop held Tuesdays and Thursdays. ESOL God’s beloved child, beautifully created offering an emergency food pantry to These will make great gifts for your fam- Questions call (435) 277-2456. in any time; casual dress; no cost; Schools students may also come anytime the in God’s own image. Whatever your his- meet the needs of our community. The ily and friends. Please call Alice Dale at snacks and drinks served; BYOB. On center is open for individualized study. tory, wherever you are in life’s journey, food pantry is available for emergency 882-1612 if you would like to purchase Tooele Family Al-Anon Saturday morning, Aug. 29, golf at Saint Marguerite Catholic Registration is $50 per semester. Call the Episcopal Church welcomes you. needs. Hours of operation are Saturdays these books. Wednesdays at 11 a.m. at the Tooele Oquirrh Hills Golf Course in Tooele. Jerry School (435) 833-8750 for more information. from 10 a.m. to noon. We are located at Pioneer Museum, in the basement at Nash will be there to greet you at the Spanish services Seeking Historical Items the back of the building. For questions Excellence in academics with forma- 580 S. Main Street. For information call pro shop at 9 a.m. sharp. On Saturday Early Head Start La Iglesia Biblica Bautista de Tooele Tooele County Historical Society would or more information, please call Allene tion in faith — registering now at Saint (435) 882-2048. evening, there will be a dinner and Do you have a child under age 3? Are le invita a sus servicios en español like members of the community who at (435) 830-0465 or Elizabeth at (435) Marguerite Catholic School. Junior celebration at Miller Motorsports Park. you currently pregnant? VANTAGE Early los jueves a las 6 p.m. y los domingos The Tooele County Food Bank have any family or personal histories, 884-0825 or (435) 241-9200. high/middle school grades 6, 7 and 8; Social hour is at 5:45 p.m., with dinner Head Start is a free program for eligible a las 2 p.m. We invite you to their photographs, books, brochures, DVDs, all-day Kindergarten; all-day preschool & Grantsville Emergency Food at 6 p.m. Bar; casual dress. Yes, we will families that offers quality early educa- Spanish services on Thursday at 6 p.m. VHS tapes, or newspaper articles that Alcoholics Anonymous program for 3 and 4-year-olds. 15 S. 7th have name tags. Please join us for this tion for infants and toddlers in the home; and Sunday at 2 p.m. Come to know a Pantry you would like to donate to our orga- Meeting daily at noon and 8 p.m. at the Street in Tooele; (435) 882-0081; www. The Tooele County Food Bank and special 50th class reunion. Any ques- parent education; comprehensive health church that focuses in the word of God nization to please call us. We are also Oasis Alano Club, 1120 W. Utah Ave. stmargschool.org. Grantsville Emergency Food Pantry tions, please contact Harriet Wilkinson services to women before, during and rather than the emotions. God loves you looking for books, newspaper articles, For more information, contact Glenn at are in need of canned meats, soups, at (801) 231-1919; Nance Weight at after pregnancy; nutrition education and and he wants to reveal himself to you. photos, brochures or any history that (435) 882-1789 or (860) 798-2139. East Elementary School pasta and any non-perishable foods. We (435) 830-5515; Rob Jensen at (435) family support services. Call (435) 841- Located at 276 E. 500 North, Tooele. pertains to the Tooele County area. If East Elementary School has openings are accepting donations for Pathways 830-7300 or Glen Lowry at (801) 792- 1380 or (801) 268-0056 ext. 211 to Call (435) 840-5036, rides provided. you would like to donate them to our Food Addicts in Recovery for parents to serve on its School Women’s and Children’s Shelter (victims 8899. apply or for free additional information. organization, or if you would let us make Anonymous Community Council for the 2015-16 St. Marguerite of domestic abuse). They are in need a copy for the Tooele County Historical Are you having trouble controlling the Fall Craft Boo-tique school year. There are two parent com- St. Marguerite Catholic Community wel- of socks, underwear, blankets for twin Free developmental evaluation Society, please call Alice Dale at (435) way you eat? Food Addicts in Recovery Tooele Methodist Women will hold its mittee member positions available. If comes you to worship with us. Our litur- beds, hygiene products (hairspray, hair DDI VANTAGE Early Intervention offers 882-1612. Anonymous (FA) is a free, 12-step annual fall boo-tique Oct. 9-10. If you interested, please fill out the volunteer gy schedule is as follows: Saturday Vigil a variety of services to families with gel, body wash, nail polish and remov- recovery program for anyone suffering are interested, contact Glenice Moore at sign-up form in the office from Aug. 5 p.m., Sunday 8:30 a.m. (Spanish), infants and toddlers from birth to age er), toys. Anything will be appreciated. from food addiction. Meetings are held (435) 830-1443 to reserve your space. 10-Sept. 4. Elections will be held Sept. 10:30 a.m. Daily Mass(M-Fri) 9 a.m. 3. Individualized services are available Underwear and socks must be new. every Saturday at 9 a.m. at the Pioneer 8-11 in the office. Confessions 4-4:45 p.m. on Saturday Groups and events to enhance development in communica- Other items can be gently used. Please Museum, 47 E. Vine St. in Tooele. Enter VFW Post 9413 or by appt. Office hours, M-Fri 10-2. Story and Craft Hour tion, motor development, cognition, help us help our community. Drop boxes at the north back entrance. For more There will be a meeting at 7 p.m. social/emotional development, self-help Our office is closed on Tues. (435)882- are located in the Intermountain Staffing Local author seeks photos Join us every Monday at 10 a.m. at information, call Millicent at (435) 882- on Thursday, Aug. 27 at the Pioneer skills and health concerns. Contact us 3860. St. Marguerite Pre-K-8th Grade Office, 7 South Main Street #203, A local author and historian is seeking the Tooele Family Center as we enjoy 7094 or Denise at (435) 830-1835 or Museum. All veterans are welcome. for a free developmental evaluation at Elementary School (435)882-0081. We Tooele, UT 84074. original photographs of Saltaire, Black the adventures of books and make fun (435) 833-0725. are located on the corner of 7th St. Rock, Garfield Beach and/or Lake Point, crafts. For more information, call 833- and Vine. First Baptist Church Food and as well as any similar turn-of-the-century 1934 ext. 1410. We are now at our new Hunter Education Clothing Closet attractions and resorts for an upcoming location, West Elementary School, 451 Utah Hunter Education courses will Rite of Christian Initiation We have clothing for everyone from book project. Those who wish to contrib- W. 300 South in Tooele. Please enter Bulletin Board Policy take place Sept. 1, 3, 8, 9 and 10 from (RCIA) newborn to adult. We ask you to take ute information or photographs of these through the south side doors. If you would like to announce an upcoming event, contact the 6-9 p.m. at the Tooele County Health Any individual or family interested in what you need and then pass the infor- parks should contact Emma Penrod Transcript-Bulletin at 882-0050, fax to 882-6123 or email to Building, located at 151 N. Main St. in converting to or joining the Catholic at [email protected]. Contributions Ready, Set, School! Preschool mation to others. We ask that you call [email protected]. “The Bulletin Board” is for special Tooele. The range day will be Sept. 12. faith, or any baptized Catholic wishing to for an appointment as we are not at the will be printed with credit in a yet-to-be Hour State law requires students to attend complete the sacraments of Eucharist or church all the time. Contact Linda (435) released pictorial history book. There is community events, charitable organizations, civic clubs, non-profit Every Tuesday at 10 a.m., the Tooele all sessions of class. All students must Confirmation may join the RCIA class at 849-1849, Sondra (435) 849-3222, or no such thing as too many photographs organizations, etc. For-profit businesses should contact the advertis- Family Center has a fun activity hour purchase a Hunter Education voucher St. Marguerite Church beginning Sunday, Sandie (435) 830-7876. as the author needs a minimum of 160 ing department. Please limit your notice to 60 words or less. The of learning, singing and creating. This for $10 from a license agent/vendor Sept. 20 at 9:45 a.m. at St. Marguerite photographs, and any help is greatly Tooele Transcript-Bulletin cannot guarantee your announcement class is for all children 0-5 years old. before attending a class. Bring the School. For more information, please Baby blankets needed appreciated. will be printed. To guarantee your announcement please call the Please come and enjoy the fun. For voucher to the first class and give to contact Marianne Rutishauser, (435) Baby blankets are needed for the nurs- advertising department at 882-0050. Information must be delivered more information, call 833-1934 ext. ery at Mountain West Medical Center. Tooele Valley Flute Choir the instructor. The voucher includes all 882-1485 or (435) 830-2613. no later than 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date. 1410. We are now at our new location, costs for the class and includes a small Blankets should be new and in good The Tooele Valley Flute Choir seeks West Elementary School, 451 W. 300 game license that is validated upon condition. Homemade blankets are members interested in our inaugural TUESDAY August 25, 2015 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN B7 TELL ME A STORY ‘The Sticky Pine’ (a Japanese folktale) tree is a sign of prosperity, and he smiled thinking adapted by Amy Friedman and that this had never been truer. illustrated by Meredith Johnson As he passed his neighbor’s house, he noticed him sitting by the window. nce upon a time, a poor woodcutter “Good day,” the neighbor called, “why is your struggled to make a living. No matter what, sack so full today?” Othe woodcutter was generous and kind to This neighbor was also a woodcutter, but he was all. He was kind to people, animals and trees. He greedy and unkind. He was forever snapping live never tore living limbs for firewood. Rather, he branches from trees. He didn’t care who he hurt, gathered dead branches. He understood that when and now, seeing his neighbor’s sack, he thought people tore off branches, the tree bled, and such a there must be something in that sack for him. thought could make him weep. The kind woodcutter, who never lied, said, “It is One summer day, the air suddenly grew cool. full of coins, a gift from the pine tree.” The woodcutter set off into the forest to hunt for “Which tree?” the neighbor asked, his head firewood. He was walking through the high pine pulsing with ideas. forest when he heard a voice whispering to him. “The big one at the top of the hill,” the kind “Hello, hello, hello,” the voice called out. woodcutter said. “I mended its broken branches, The woodcutter turned around, but no one was and it gave me coins in thanks.” there. “Ah!” said the neighbor, and moments later “Hello,” the voice came again, “my sap is quite he was hurrying into the forest. He thought only sticky; sticky is my sap.” of money — how he always had to get some. He The woodcutter stared at the tall pine tree wanted to be rich. He wanted a big house and before him and understood it was the tree that feasts and fancy clothes. He wished to spoil his was speaking. wife and to make her happy. But she was never “Sticky is my sap when tender twigs are happy. snapped,” the voice sang. When he found the tree, he looked up and said, The woodcutter noticed sap was running from “Sticky, sticky, sticky tree: Give me some of your the tree’s broken limb. Someone had torn off its money!” limb. The woodcutter’s heart broke at the sight, The tree shivered, remembering the pain of bro- and he quickly reached into his knapsack for ban- ken branches and the cruel touch of this man. dages. “Sticky, sticky is my blood,” the tree replied. “If “These, your tender twigs, I shall wrap,” he you touch me, there’ll be a flood.” whispered, “and in this way, I’ll stop the sap.” The neighbor’s eyes lit up at this. He imagined The woodcutter carefully mended the branches, a flood of money and his own knapsack bulging wrapping them in bandages by pulling off his own with coins. He imagined filling a wagon with still jacket and tearing it in pieces to use as cloth. more. When he had finished, the tree sighed and shiv- “Wonderful!” he said, and he reached out and ered, and suddenly gold and silver coins began broke off another branch. to fall from the tree’s limbs onto the woodcutter. As he broke it, the pine tree began to shake and There were dozens and dozens of coins. They did shiver and bend. Out of its bark, sap began to flow not stop falling. — more sap than any woodcutter had ever seen. The woodcutter collected these and stuffed Just as the tree had promised, there was a flood of away, but they were so covered with sap, they sap and free him. When at last the weather turned them into his knapsack until it bulged. sap, pouring out everywhere, pouring down onto stuck to the ground, and before he knew what was warm again, the sap melted, and he was free. “Thank you, friend. You are a generous soul,” he the woodcutter. happening, he could not move. He was just about He crept slowly home. Once he was clean and said to the tree. Soon he was soaked with sap, sticky and to cry out for help, but he quickly snapped his safe, he vowed he would never again harm a tree As he was walking home, the woodcutter began uncomfortable. He reached up to touch his hair, mouth closed because he feared it would also fill — and he never did. He taught his children to to understand that he was no longer poor, and his and his hand stuck there. He reached out with his with sap. respect the trees. heart swelled with gratitude for the generous pine other hand to stop the flow, but his other hand For three long days, the woodcutter stood there Ever since that day, all his ancestors have hon- tree. He thought about the fact that in Japan a pine stuck to the tree. He tried to stomp his feet to pull waiting for the sun to shine down and melt the ored the trees. Full Local Sports Coverage In Every Issue TOOELETRANSCRIPT BULLETIN Your Community Newspaper

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TOOELETRANSCRIPT BULLETIN PLACE YOUR AD HERE • CALL 882-0050 SERVICE DIRECTORY CONTRACTORS CONTRACTORS CONTRACTORS MISCELLANEOUS ��� Air Conditioning Locally owned and serving Tooele County for 20 years Camie Jefferies $50OFF $ CONCRETE������������������������ First Time 49 NEW A Yeagle and Sons Company Repair or Tune-Up Air Conditioning Air Conditioner $ System for as little Driveways • Brick Walls • Concrete Stamping 25 OFF For Existing Tune-Up as $29 a month 435-833-0510 • [email protected] Customers 435.840.0727 Not valid with any Not valid with any Not valid with any Siding and More other offer. Valid only at other offer. Valid only at other offer. Valid only at • Drain Cleaning • Camera Sewer Line & Locate participating locations. participating locations. participating locations. camiejeff [email protected] Call for details. Limited Call for details. Limited Call for details. Limited Affordable Prices • Leaky Faucets • Residential time offer. time offer. time offer. *WAC @camiejeff eries • Water Heaters • Commercial FREE Estimates Harris Aire Serv® 36 N Main #3 • Backflow Tech. • Hydronic Heat Tooele Utah 84074 • Sprinkler Repair/Install • Locally Owned & Operated 435-248-0430 HarrisAireServ.com 801-856-6082 Free Estimates • 24 Hour Emergency Service Independently owned and operated franchise.

CONTRACTORS CONTRACTORS CONTRACTORS MISCELLANEOUS STOWE BRO’S LICENSED & INSURED RHINO LININGS Protect your truck with the world’s • Permanently Protects PLUMBING Against Rust and Corrosion #1 SPRAYED-ON LINING HANDYMAN • Won’t Peel, Crack or Warp • Outperforms All Drop-In • Journeyman Liners • Great for Boats, Trailers, • Painting RV’s, Jeeps®, etc. • Household • Helps Keep your Gear from Sliding • Yard Projects PLUMBING • Resists Abrasion, even VETERAN OWNED-VETERAN OPERATED under Heavy Use Contact Kevin Stowe WINDOW TINT • Not a Paint-Like Coating... Sprays on up to 1/4” ���������������������� THE SHOP Thick Residential & Commercial ����������������������� 882-8669• 756 N. Main 435.919.7719 24 HOUR SERVICE! WE SERVICE ALL BRANDS & ALL TYPES NOTHING BEATS A REAL RHINO® CONTRACTORS Locally Owned & Operated MISCELLANEOUS • Frozen Pipes DRAINS • SEWERS • Water Heaters HOME REPAIRS SAME DAY! ������������������������� Expert • Water Softeners ����������������������� • Drain Cleaning Door knobs, baseboards, moldings, TOOELE - GRANTSVILLE - SURROUNDING AREAS ���������������� drywall repairs, textures, caulking, • Camera Sewer Line ������������� weatherproofing, framing, home 435.833.9393 • Washer/dryers COMPETITIVE RATES! • Refrigerators updating and renovations and much SENIOR DISCOUNTS • Dishwashers more. Small Jobs okay. Call Shane • Microwaves �������������������� 882.2857 • 882.3942 TOOELE • Swamp coolers ����������������� 241.0047 CELL • Ranges/etc. 435.840.0344 PLUMBING ��� ����� 882-4614 B8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN TUESDAY August 25, 2015

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CLASSIFIED LINE AD RATES NOTICE Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. does not endorse, promote, or encourage the purchase of any product or service advertised Rates for the Tooele Transcript Bulletin, published every Tuesday and Thursday in this newspaper. Advertisements are the sole responsibility of the advertiser. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. hereby disclaims all liability for any damages suffered as the result of any advertisement in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. is TWENTY WORDS OR LESS MONTHLY RATE not responsible for any claims or representations made in advertisements in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. The Tooele Transcript- Bulletin An ad running a minimum of 8 consecutive issues has the sole authority to edit and locate any classifi ed advertisement as deemed appropriate. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. reserves * After 20 Words $ 50 $ ** $2.00 per word over 20 words the right to refuse any advertisement. 30¢ per word/issue Bold/boxed ads extra 6 25 **No credit for stopped ads. Includes Bold Type 5¢ per word/issue (20 words or less) 4 runs in the Tooele Valley “Extra” All real estate advertised in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to Boxed ads 50¢ per issue All classifi ed line ads running in the Tooele Transcript Bulletin on Tuesday or Thursday will advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, religion, sex or national origin, or any intention to make any such *Includes the Tooele Valley “Extra” and Transcript Bulletin web-site automatically run in the Tooele Valley Extra, a separate publication that is delivered to all preference, limitation or discrimination.” The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in nonsubscribers of the Tooele Transcript Bulletin. They will also run on our web-site. violation of the law. Our readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this paper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Classifi ed ad deadlines: Monday 4:45 p.m. for Tuesday edition • Wednesday 4:45 p.m. for Thursday edition

Garage, Yard Homes for Homes for Services Services Services Miscellaneous Sales Help Wanted Autos Rent Rent

HANSON & SONS C A L L J O E FUN PIANO LESSONS! Computer problems - vi- GRANTSVILLE, 106 Business owners If you Got an older car, boat or FREE RENT! Caretaker OVERLAKE, 4BDRM, Handyman Home re- (801)895-6237 Bill Pro- Spots available for half ruses, lost data, hard- McMichael, Friday need someone fast, RV? Do the humane for Ranch in Skull Val- 2.5bth, double car ga- pairs, finish basements, fessional Landscaping/ hour lessons ware or software is- 8am-5pm, Saturday place your classified ad thing. Donate it to the ley. Perfect for Dugway rage, tri-level rambler, siding, roofing, plumb- Concrete. Driveways, $40/month starting in sues? Contact Geeks 8am-7pm. Huge yard in all 48 of Utah's news- Humane Society. Call employees, solitude $1295/mo. ing, electrical, decks, retaining walls. Any September. Call now to On Site! 24/7 Service. sale. Craft supplies, papers. The person you 1- 800-849-1593 seekers. Call (801)842-9631 tile. Very Reasonable. wall, Stamped con- reserve your spot! Friendly Repair Ex- household items, and are looking for could be (801)808-1667 Inter- www.guardrightprop- SELL YOUR CAR or Local Tooele. Jeff crete. Hauling, tree Bethany (435)882-3482 perts. Macs and PCs. tools. from out of town. The view, deposit required. erty.com, Realty Choice boat in the classifieds. (435)775-1445 trimming, sod. Free Es- Call for FREE diagno- cost is only $163. for a Call 882-0050 or visit timates. Licensed, In- HANDYMAN. Tree trim- sis. 1-800-883-0979 TOOELE 97 North 3rd 25 word ad and it GRANTSVILLE, CLEAN TOOELE 4BDRM www.tooeletranscript. sured. ming, sprinklers, yard Street, Saturday reaches up to 340,000 2bdrm 1bth duplex, 1.5bth, double carport, DIAMONDS don't pay com work. Snow Removal. 8am-?. Big estate households. All you do $650/mo $500/dep. near schools. ALTERATIONS CUSTOM CONCRETE retail! Large selection, Residential and busi- sale, Pearl drum set, is call the Transcript Carport, w/d hookups, $1100/mo, owner pays high quality. Bridal sets, and AWARD Over 45yrs experi- ness. Call Jimmy at furniture, kitchenware, B u l l e t i n a t credit & references water. Call wedding bands. Every- WINNING ence. Licensed and (435)849-7127 clothes, too much to (435)882-0050 for all Trucks checked. Call for ap- 801-641-2615 after thing wholesale! Rocky insured. Free esti- (435)224-4502 mention, everything the details. (Mention pointment. 5:00pm. TAILORING Mtn. Diamond Co. mates. Call Tyson goes! UCAN) You can now (619)245-3359 (435)849-3374 HOME REPAIRS expert. S.L.C. 1-800-396-6948 1979 CHEVROLET K20 TOOELE, 3BDRM by Door knobs, base- order online www.utah- 3/4 ton 4X4 pickup GRANTSVILLE/ South 1.5bth twin home, sin- boards, mouldings, dry- DIRECTV Starting at press.com 77,775 miles. Auto ELECTRICIAN/ HANDY- Willow, 4bdrm, 2.5bth, gle car garage, KATHY wall repairs, textures, $19.99/mo. FREE In- transmission was re- MAN residential/ com- Pets CARPET CLEANING 2 story, 3 car garage, $850/mo. Guardright caulking, weatherproof- stallation. FREE 3 built on December 28, mercial electrical in- technician. Looking for central ac, Property (801)842-9631 JONES ing, framing, home up- months of HBO 2010 at 73,000 miles stalls & repairs, remod- motivated hardworking No Pets/ Smoking guardrightproperty.com, dating and renovations SHOWTIME CINEMAX Pampered Pet Resort but currently the truck is eling, painting, plumb- individual with good $1495/mo Realty Choice and much more.Small starz. FREE HD/DVR Quality pet care for not going in reverse. I ing! Dale 435-843-7693 sales background and 1088 S. Big Tree Drive jobs okay. Call Shane Upgrade! 2015 NFL over 30 years. have not had it diag- TOOELE, 4BDRM, 882-6605 801-865-1878 Li- outgoing personality. Davidson Realty (435)840-0344 Sunday Ticket Included Dog & Cat boarding nosed. Asking $750 2.5bth, beautiful fenced censed, insured.! Major We will train (801)466-5078 (Select Packages) New 435-884-3374 obo call or text yard, 2 single garages, A1 PAINTING. credit cards accepted! 435-830-3044. www.dripm.com Interior, JERAMIAH!S WINDOW Customers Only. CALL pamperedpetresort.com 435-830-2688 2400sqft living, exterior painting, stain- FREE ESTIMATES! Cleaning LLC. Full 1-800-410-4728 CONCRETE FINISHER $1195/mo. guardright- FREE KITTENS calico HOMES available to pur- ing, deck oiling, power Decks, Sheds, Patios, service professional 2yrs experience property.com Realty DOG RUN with dog- tabby mixed. 2 males, 1 chase for LOW IN- washing, drywall, Basements and much window cleaning. Call $15-$25/hr depending Apartments Choice (801)842-9631 house for sale, $250 female. Smoky gray COME buyers with phase, patching. Pro- more! Licensed, In- to schedule a free esti- on experience. Must for Rent firm. Child!s play pen, and white, white dark good credit.! Berna SELL YOUR car in the fessional work at rea- sured. Garcias Con- mate 435-840-4773 have transportation and brand new $250 firm. brown, spots brown and Sloan (435)840-5029 Transcript Bulletin Clas- sonable rates. Steve struction. Call Tyson tools 801-712-2230 $500-$800 2 or 3BDRM (435)248-9113 (435)849-3374 PRIVATE TUTORING. C a l l S t a c y white, 435-882-7622. for rent. Call Amber Group 1 Real Estate. sified section. I am a certified (435)840-2067 FACTORY LABOR. 435-850-8781. PLEASE ADOPT Ador- DRYWALL: Hanging, SELL YOUR computer teacher with 20yrs ex- Temporary employment FOR SALE- Studio able rescued kittens. All finishing, texturing. 33 in the classifieds. Call perience. All ages/ available through Janu- 1BDRM 1BTH $395/mo, model piano in very colors and ages avail- years experience. Li- 882-0050 or visit subjects. Call Angela ary. These are Factory w/ $30 water fee.! good conditon. $700 able. Please call censed and insured. www.tooeletranscript. for free assessment Labor/ Production posi- Spacious Apartments 435-882-1566 435-882-2667 Doug (435)830-2653 com (435)882-2733 tions. We will train. We 144 N 3rd Street, (435)496-0590 If you sell Insurance, RUSH LAKE are located on the Utah Tooele. (801)627-1132 CORRECTIONS OFFICER promote a hospital or Industrial Depot. $9/hr, RAIN GUTTERS, seam- KENNELS. 1BDRM basement apart- an ambulance service, 7:45am-4:15pm. Over- TOOELE COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE less, aluminum, all col- Dog & Cat boarding, ment, large, all utilities place your classified ad time available. 20 posi- Starting Salary: $18.07 per hour ors, leaf protection. Sid- obedience training. included. $675/mo. Call in all 47 of Utah's news- tions available. Apply Status: Full-time with Benefi ts ing & roofing repair. Li- Call (435)882-5266 (435)840-3803 papers. The cost is only in person and ready Closing Date: September 03, 2015 at 5:00 p.m. censed and insured, rushlakekennels.com $163. for a 25 word ad to work. No phone free estimates. Tooele County is currently accepting applications to ($5. For each additional calls please. Midwest Tooele Gateway (435)841-4001 word). You will reach Apartments establish a roster for a Corrections Offi cer I with the Canvas, 230 South Tooele County Sheriff’s Department; all applicants up to 500,000 newspa- TREE WORK. Free es- Livestock Garnet, Tooele, UT. 2 AND 3bdrm must attach test scores or verifi cation of completing per readers. Just call timates! Local com- EOE. apartments behind Super the Written Entry Test required by the Utah P.O.S.T pany. Licensed & in- Tooele Transcript Bulle- Academy. Certifi ed Peace Offi cer or Corrections Need to sell that new FRAMER RESIDEN- Wal-Mart. Swimming sured. Bucket truck, tin at (435)882-0050 for Offi cer must also attach a copy of the certifi cation !"#$%&&'()*+,$%((-*&.)*"+/ champion bull or your TIAL homes Tooele pool, hot tub, exercise Crane service, Stump details. (Ucan) with their employment application. Now Renting yearling calves? Place County work. Call room, playground, full removal, mulch. Income!"#$%&'(&)*+,#*,$")'-../0 Restrictions Apply METAL ROOF/WALL your classified ad into 435-840-0412 clubhouse. A P.O.S.T. standards physical agility test (vertical 801-633-6685 Pre- Panels, Pre-engineered 47 newspapers, find leap, push-ups, sit-ups, and 1 ½ mile run) and a Exclusively(&"*1/'1)),)*1"#&'%10'2&' for Seniors ciseYard.com Metal Buildings. Mill your buyers quickly. For HIRING OTR PROFES- Tooele Gateway short interview will be administered at the Tooele prices for sheeting coil SIONALS who want Apartments County Detention Center 1960 South Main, 131,/12/&4'51//'6$+'7&*1,/) SELL YOUR CAR or only $163. your 25 Pet Friendly are at a 4 year low. You Consistent Miles- aver- Tooele, UT 84074 on September 11, 2015 at 8:00 boat in the classifieds. word classified will be (435)843-4400 a.m. (You will not be re-notifi ed of this testing get the savings. 17 Col- age 2,700+; consistent Call 882-0050 or visit seen by up to 500,000 date). Applicants who do not take the test will be 012340135676 ors prime material, cut pay- average $51,400 Call for details www.tooeletranscript. readers. It is as simple disqualifi ed from further consideration. Please to your exact length. per year; 2014 or newer 899$45536123:;55 com or e-mail your ad as calling the Tooele attach all diplomas and certifi cations you may have 435.843.0717 CO Building Systems trucks; Call Fischer to tbp@tooeletran- Transcript Bulletin at 2BDRM 1bth, quiet. No acquired for verifi cation. 1-800-COBLDGS (435)882-0050 for de- Trucking tday pets, no smoking, 1yr script.com POSITION DUTIES: Will maintain the security tails. (Ucan) 1-800-486-8660 lease, air, w/d hookups, Protect Your Home with of the Tooele County Detention Facility and will storage shed, carport, Alarm Advisors - Your P/T ASSISTANT needed uphold order and insure prisoner welfare. water, sewer, garbage Home Security Advo- in busy leasing office. Sporting included. For further in- MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS cate. Compare Provid- MWF 8-5. Starting $9. Employment Opportunity Goods formation please call Corrections Offi cer I- $18.07: ers in Your Area. This Phones, record-keeping, • Graduation from high school or GED; 2 years of (435)882-4986 Month, Get a $100 Visa SELLING YOUR moun- computer proficiency, in- responsible work experience Gift Card With a New tain bike? Advertise it in spections.! Resume to SETTLEMENT CAN- • Must have the ability to be qualifi ed in the use of System! Cal l the classifieds. Call [email protected] YON APARTMENTS 2 fi rearms in order to serve in a bailiff or 1-800-208-4831 or fax to 801-451-0443. & 3 bedroom apts. transportation of prisoner position 882-0050 www.tooele • Must successfully pass a comprehensive transcript.com SEEKING Weekend Prices starting at background investigation, drug testing and a We offer great Safe Step Walk-In Tub work carpool for 8am to $840/mo. Call Danielle psychological evaluation as a condition of hire benefi ts that include: • Sales Alert for Seniors. Bath- 4:30 shift near Airport. (435)882-6112 for info. • 21 years of age at the time of hire. health/dental and room falls can be fatal. Personals Rate negotiable. Con- SPACIOUS 2 & 3BDRM • A citizen of the United States; a resident of the State of Utah vision insurance. Consultants Approved by Arthritis tact 435-277-0183. apartments available, Foundation. Therapeu- • Must possess and maintain a valid Utah Drivers 401K with company Find the love you de- Call today for move in License; No disqualifying criminal history; No DUI tic Jets. Less Than 4 serve! Discover the Business specials! The Willows convictions in the past two years. match. Vacation and • Certified Inch Step-In. Wide 366 E Main Grantsville. path to happiness. Opportunities • Full-time position/ Must work rotating shifts to personal days off. Door. Anti-Slip Floors. New members receive (435)884-6211 include weekends and holidays. Technicians American Made. Instal- We provide paid on a FREE 3-minute love Small Business owners: Corrections Offi cer II- $21.96: Meet the going training and lation Included. Call reading! Entertainment 800-682-1403 for $750 Place your classified ad Homes for minimum qualifi cations for a Corrections Offi cer purposes only. 18 and I; a minimum of two (2) years as a certifi ed promote from within. • Receptionist / Off. in 45 newspapers Rent Great opportunity over. 800-821-1963 throughout Utah for corrections offi cer. SELL YOUR computer in Cashier - PT Meet singles right now! only $163. for 25 WHY RENT When You to start a career in the classifieds. Call For a complete job description or an on-line No paid operators, just words, and $5. per Can Buy? Zero down the Auto Business 882-0050 or visit application please visit real people like you. word over 25. You will & Low Income pro- www.tooeletranscript. http://www.co.tooele.ut.us/hr.html while making a • Quick Lane Browse greetings, ex- reach up to 340,000 grams, 1st time & Sin- com households and it is a Applications must be submitted to strong income – best change messages and gle parent programs, Tooele County Human Resource Offi ce, Rm 308 auto sales pay plan Technicians WILL BUY used video connect live. Try it free. one call, one order, one Berna Sloan (435) bill program. Call the 47 South Main Street Tooele in the state. Team games. Game systems Call now: 800-359-2796 840-5029 Group 1 or email application and resume to attention under $50, games un- ucan Transcript Bulletin at environment that 3BDRM, 2BTH mobile Tita Adams at [email protected] der $20. And still work- 882-0050 for further home for rent, no smok- EEO Employer works well together. • Used Car ing Sega, Nintendo, info. (ucan) ing/ pets. 882-1550 Signing bonus for the Technicians Xbox, Sony, GameBoy, Child Care right candidates! 435-882-7622. Wanted You may have just the ABC DISCOVERY Pre- EMPLOYING TOOELE COUNTY Apply in person 1141 North Main thing someone out of school openings for Fall town is looking for. 2015. Ages 4 & 5yr. I AM paying more for or call 882-7000, 882-1300 Place your classified ad Certified teacher w/Kin- junk cars and trucks. I FOR OVER 59 YEARS.... in 45 of Utah's newspa- dergarten experience. will come to you and pers, the cost is $163. T/TH classes, AM & tow it away. Call/Text For up to 25 words. PM. Lori Walters (435)224-2064 DL5970 We are Growing again.... You will be reaching a (435)882-0136 WANTED: Scrap metal. !"#$%&"'()*+,--.)'$ potential of up to LOVING RELIABLE Appliances, lawn mow- Competitive pay scale 340,000 households. Child care in my home. ers, garbage disposals, All you need to do is with bonus opportunities, Snacks, meals, plenty batteries, fencing, etc. call the Transcript Bul- of indoor & outdoor fun. Will pick up free. Col- great employee benefits letin at 882-0050 for full /#%0*1#"2*3#-.*4') All ages welcome. Mi- lecting for Homeless details. (Mentio n with perks. chelle (435)882-9911 Hospice. Call Rick at UCAN) 5$&-,2.%6 (801)599-5634 !"#$%&"'(")*"+,-"./'00)1-(0 Furniture & Help Wanted !"2"3-'45"6%+5"7//"8-'+,-&" Appliances Autos #'&("9):*0 BABYSITTER NEEDED DELIVERY DRIVER FULL TIME NORTH VALLEY Appli- at my home in Grants- 2002 MITSHUBISHI Dia- Must be 21 years or older. No CDL required. Clean driving record. !";&-<=&).-("/'>-/0 ance. Washers/ dryers ville. 3days on 3days mante 135k miles. refrigerators, freezers, !"?/'*@"/'>-/0"A$&"*'B)*:" off. Call Ken Leather, great radio, stoves, dishwashers. 5$%&"$C*"=&).- (435)884-4411 runs good. $1,500 WAREHOUSE WORKER FULL TIME $149-$399. Complete !"7*("B$&-D O B O . C a l l repair service. Satis- TAXI DRIVERS wanted . 435-830-7035. faction guaranteed. Must be dependable, ASSISTANT BUYER/ PART TIME: Parts for all brands. Gift honest with good driv- !82 CHEVY Caprice 24 - 30 HOURS cards w/purchases over ing record. Be at least Classic diesel, only CUSTOMER SERVICE PER WEEK $199. (435)830-3225. 25yrs old with people 50,700 miles. Call Don skills. Call 435-830-2777. (435)882-2758, leave Garage, Yard Cars for Troops! Donate RETAIL SALES ASSOCIATE FULL TIME !"#!$%&'()"&$#*+ message with name 7$-0* your car and help the Sales and return phone num- military charity of your ber. HAVING A GARAGE choice. Fast, free SALE? Advertise it in HAVING A yard sale? pickup. Tax Deductible. Apply in person: !"#$%%&'&()*+,%-./0 the classifieds. Call Advertise in the Tran- C a l l N o w ! 2502 N 400 E Tooele or call 435-882-0964 89:;<= 882-0050 script 800-838-5806 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BOARD OF EDUCATION OF TOOELE COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT, UTAH PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on August 11, 2015, the Board of Education (the “Board”) of Tooele County School District, Utah (the “District”) adopted a resolution (the “Resolution”), providing for a Bond Election to be held in the District on Tuesday, November 3, 2015, for the purpose of submitting to the quali- fied electors of the Dis- trict the question of the issuance of general obli- gation bonds in an amount not to exceed $49,000,000 (the “Bond Election”) and calling a public hearing to receive input from the public with respect to the issuance of general obligation bonds and the potential economic impact that the improvement, facility, or property for which the bonds pay all or part of the cost will have on the private sector, pursuant to the Section 11-14-318 of the Utah Code Anno- tated 1953, as amended. PURPOSE FOR THE IS- SUANCE OF GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS If approved by eligible voters at the Bond Elec- tion, the Board intends to issue general obligation bonds for the purpose of constructing and acquir- ing one or more school sites, buildings and fur- nishings and improving existing school property under the charge of the Board and, to the extent necessary, for providing moneys for the refund- ing, at or prior to the ma- turity thereof, of general obligation bonds of the Board. MAXIMUM PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF THE GEN- ERAL OBLIGATION BONDS If approved by eligible voters at the Bond Elec- tion, the Board intends to issue general obligation bonds in an amount not to exceed $49,000,000, in one or more series at one or more times. THE TAXES, IF ANY, PROPOSED TO BE PLEDGED The Board proposes to pledge the full faith and credit of the District for the payment of its gen- NOTICE OF PUBLIC eral obligation bonds HEARING BOARD OF and may be obligated to EDUCATION OF levy and collect ad valo- TOOELE COUNTY rem taxes sufficient to SCHOOL DISTRICT, pay the general obliga- UTAH PUBLIC NOTICE tion bonds, as provided IS HEREBY GIVEN that by law. on August 11, 2015, the TIME, PLACE AND LO- Board of Education (the CATION OF PUBLIC “Board”) of Tooele HEARING County School District, The Board will hold a Utah (the “District”) public hearing at a meet- adopted a resolution (the ing scheduled to begin at “Resolution”), providing 7:00 p.m. on September for a Bond Election to be 8, 2015. The public hear- held in the District on ing will be held at the Tuesday, November 3, District!s offices, located 2015, for the purpose of at 92 Lodestone Way, submitting to the quali- Tooele, Utah. All mem- fied electors of the Dis- bers of the public are in- trict the question of the vited to attend and par- issuance of general obli- ticipate in the public gation bonds in an hearing. Prior to the pub- amount not to exceed lic hearing, written com- TUESDAY August 25, 2015 $49,000,000 (the “Bond ments may be submitted Election”) andTOOELE calling a to TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN the Board, to the at- B9 public hearing to receive tention of the Business input from the public with Administrator, 92 Lode- Homes Financial Public Notices respectPublic to theNotices issuance stonePublic Way, NoticesTooele, Utah Public Notices Services Meetings of generalMeetings obligation 84074.Meetings Water User bonds and the potential DATED August 11, $$SAVE MONEY Restore your credit! Lex- LEPC Agenda economic impact that the 2015. Deadline for public no- MONEY SAVING coupons Search Bank & HUD ington Law offers a Agenda for the LEPC improvement, facility, or BOARD OF EDUCA- tices is 4 p.m. the day homes www.Tooele FREE consultation with meeting to be held property for which the TION OF TOOELE prior to publication. in each Tuesday’s paper BankHomes.com a Credit Consultant. Wednesday, August 26, bonds pay all or part of COUNTY SCHOOL DIS- Public notices submit- Berna Sloan (435) Regain your financial 2015 at 1:30 p.m. at the the cost will have on the TRICT, UTAH ted past the deadline 840-5029 Group 1 health - Call Now! Tooele County Emer- private sector, pursuant (Published in the Tran- will not be accepted. 800-509-6820 gency Management to the Section 11-14-318 script Bulletin August 18 UPAXLP 40 COLUMBIA Drive. 3 Building, 15 East 100 of the Utah Code Anno- & 25, 2015) Sell your structured set- or 4bdrms 2bth. South, Tooele, Utah, in tated 1953, as amended. Public Notices 2370sqft. separate tlement or annuity pay- the Emergency Opera- PURPOSE FOR THE IS- REQUEST FOR PRO- shop building, RV park- ments for CASH NOW. tions Training room. SUANCE OF GENERAL POSALS Miscellaneous ing, pictures on You don't have to wait 1. Welcome- Chairman, OBLIGATION BONDS The Stansbury Service zillow.com. $189,000. for your future pay- LEPC If approved by eligible Agency of Tooele Deadline for public no- Call 435-830-0490 ments any longer! Call 2. Approve July 2015 voters at the Bond Elec- County has budgeted tices is 4 p.m. the day 1-800-681-3252 minutes tion, the Board intends to $250,000.00 for the rec- prior to publication. Planning on selling your lamation of the shoreline Public notices submit- SOCIAL SECURITY 3. Haz Mat reports- issue general obligation home, you could be behind the Stansbury ted past the deadline DISABILITY BENE- Bucky Whitehouse bonds for the purpose of sending your sales Club House. The Agency will not be accepted. FITS. Unable to work? 4. Review upcoming constructing and acquir- points to up to 340,000 has created a scope of UPAXLP Denied benefits? We training ing one or more school households at once. work for the entire pro- Can Help! WIN or Pay 5. DEM Liaison, Emer- sites, buildings and fur- PUBLIC NOTICE For $163. you can ject, which is available Nothing! Contact Bill gency Services nishings and improving The Union Pacific Rail- place your 25 word by emailing a request to Gordon & Associates at 6. Roundtable existing school property road Company is pro- classified ad to all 45 [email protected] 1-800-871-7805 to start 7. Next meeting- Sep- under the charge of the posing to construct a 70 newspapers in Utah. rg. The contract will be your application today! tember 30, 2015 Board and, to the extent foot PTC monopole Just call the Transcript 8. Adjourn necessary, for providing awarded to the contrac- Bulletin at 882-0050 for tower and associated Filed by LEPC Chair- moneys for the refund- tor who can complete equipment at 40.52764, all the details. (Mention Public Notices man, Bucky Whitehouse ing, at or prior to the ma- the most improvements, ucan) -112.332524 in Tooele Meetings (Published in the Tran- turity thereof, of general from the scope of work, C ounty, Utah SELLING YOUR script Bulletin August 20 obligation bonds of the for the budgeted (UT-TOOELE-748.2). HOME? Advertise it in Deadline for public no- & 25, 2015) Board. amount. Past experi- The Union Pacific Rail- ence, references, and the classifieds. Call tices is 4 p.m. the day PUBLIC NOTICE MAXIMUM PRINCIPAL road Company is seek- 882-0050 or visit prior to publication. AMOUNT OF THE GEN- timetable will also be NOTICE IS HEREBY ing comments from all www.tooeletran Public notices submit- ERAL OBLIGATION considered when award- GIVEN THAT there will interested persons on script.com ted past the deadline BONDS ing the contract. A walk the impact of the pro- will not be accepted. not be a Tooele City If approved by eligible through of the project will Planning Commission posed tower on any dis- UPAXLP voters at the Bond Elec- be held on Tuesday, tricts, sites, buildings, meeting held Wednes- tion, the Board intends to August 25, 2015, at 9:00 Mobile Homes AGENDA day, August 26, 2015. structures, or objects issue general obligation am, in the Service significant in American NOTICE is hereby given The next meeting will be bonds in an amount not Agency Office, 1 Country history, architecture, ar- that the Stansbury Serv- held Wednesday, Sep- 3BDRM, 2BTH mobile to exceed $49,000,000, Club, Stansbury Park, chaeology, engineering, ice Agency Board of tember 9, 2015 at 7:00 home for rent, no smok- in one or more series at Utah 84074. Contractors or culture, that are listed Trustees will hold its pm. The meeting will be ing/ pets. 882-1550 one or more times. wishing to bid are highly or are eligible for listing Subscribe Today! regular meeting on held at Tooele City Hall TOOELE THE TAXES, IF ANY, encouraged to attend. in the National Register 3BDRM, 2BTH mobile Wednesday, August in the City Council TRANSCRIPT PROPOSED TO BE Sealed proposals along of Historic Places. All 882-0050 home for rent, no smok- 26th, 2015 at 7:00 pm at Chambers, located at 90 PLEDGED with references and questions, comments, 58 N. Main • 8-6 BULLETIN ing/ pets. 882-1550 the Stansbury Park North Main Street, The Board proposes to proof of license and in- and correspondence Clubhouse, #1 Country Tooele, Utah. (Published pledge the full faith and surance, must be sub- should be directed to Club Drive, Stansbury in the Transcript Bulletin credit of the District for mitted to the Service Ms. Mary Cargill, at 520 Offi ce Space Park, Utah 84074. August 25, 2015) the payment of its gen- Agency Office by 4:00 South Main Street, Suite BUSINESS MEETING NOTICE OF PUBLIC eral obligation bonds pm on September 4, 2531, Akron, Ohio 1. Call to Order TOOELE HEARING BOARD OF and may be obligated to 2015. Proposals will be 44311, Phone # TRANSCRIPT 2. Pledge of Allegiance E D U C A T I O N O F levy and collect ad valo- reviewed by a selection 330-572-3642, or mcar- 3. Preview and Adopt BULLETIN TOOELE COUNTY rem taxes sufficient to committee and the win- gill@strategicenviron- PERFECT Minutes SCHOOL DISTRICT, pay the general obliga- ning bidder will be noti- mental.net. (Published in a. August 12, 2015 UTAH PUBLIC NOTICE tion bonds, as provided fied. Contractors wishing the Transcript Bulletin 54 South Main Regular Meeting IS HEREBY GIVEN that by law. to bid must be licensed, August 25, 2015) 4. Public Comment on August 11, 2015, the TIME, PLACE AND LO- insured and able to pro- A Full-Color Learning and 602.826.9471 5. SPCA Agreement Board of Education (the CATION OF PUBLIC vide a performance bond 6. Sports' Association “Board”) of Tooele HEARING for the project. For fur- Activity Page Just for Kids! Meeting County School District, The Board will hold a ther inquiries, contact 7. Recess Reach Utah (the “District”) public hearing at a meet- Randall Jones at Every Thursday in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin Buildings WORK SESSION adopted a resolution (the ing scheduled to begin at 435-830-7271. Every 1. Manager's Report “Resolution”), providing 7:00 p.m. on September (Published in the Tran- 2. Social Media for SSA If you build, remodel or for a Bond Election to be 8, 2015. The public hear- script Bulletin August 18, Household 3. Board Members' Re- remove buildings you held in the District on ing will be held at the 20 & 25, 27 & Septem- ports and Requests in the can place your classi- Tuesday, November 3, District!s offices, located ber 1 2015) 4. Correspondence fied ad in 45 of Utah's 2015, for the purpose of at 92 Lodestone Way, 5. Financials and Bills Tooele newspapers for only submitting to the quali- Tooele, Utah. All mem- 6. Possible Closed Ses- Public Notices $163. for 25 words ($5. fied electors of the Dis- bers of the public are in- Valley! sion Trustees for each additional trict the question of the vited to attend and par- 7. Adjourn word). You will reach issuance of general obli- ticipate in the public (Published in the Tran- Deadline for public no- TOOELE up to 340,000 house- gation bonds in an hearing. Prior to the pub- TRANSCRIPT script Bulletin August 25, tices is 4 p.m. the day holds and all you do is amount not to exceed lic hearing, written com- BULLETIN 2015) prior to publication. call the Transcript Bul- $49,000,000 (the “Bond ments may be submitted letin at 882-0050 for all Public notices submit- SELLING YOUR Election”) and calling a to the Board, to the at- TOTAL MARKET the details. (Mention ted past the deadline HOME? Advertise it in public hearing to receive tention of the Business COVERAGE PLAN UCAN Classified Net- will not be accepted. the classifieds. Call input from the public with Administrator, 92 Lode- work) UPAXLP 882-0050 or visit respect to the issuance stone Way, Tooele, Utah Advertising BECOME A SUB- www.tooeletran of general obligation 84074. BECOME A SUB- 882-0050 SCRIBER. 882-0050 script.com bonds and the potential DATED August 11, SCRIBER. 882-0050 economic impact that the 2015. improvement, facility, or BOARD OF EDUCA- property for which the TION OF TOOELE bonds pay all or part of COUNTY SCHOOL DIS- 552 Water Wheelthe cost will have onLane, the TRICT, UTAH Stansbury Park private sector, pursuant (Published in the Tran- to the Section 11-14-318 script Bulletin August 18 of the Utah Code Anno-6 Bedroom,& 25, 2015) 3.5 Bath, Remodeled Home tated 1953, as amended. PURPOSE FOR THE IS-Recently re-carpeted, new laminate flooring and SUANCE OF GENERAL new tile, re-painted, New roof, furnace, air con- OBLIGATION BONDS If approved by eligibleditioner, water heater and garage door, new solid voters at the Bond Elec- tion, the Board intends tosurface kitchen countertops, microwave and dish- issue general obligationwasher !!!! Open lovely floor plan with so many bonds for the purpose of constructing and acquir-extras, including a theater room in the basement! ing one or more school sites, buildings and fur- nishings and improving existing school property under the charge of the Board and, to the extent Subscribe TOOELETRANSCRIPT necessary, for providing moneys for the refund- 882-0050 BULLETIN ing, at or prior to the ma- turity thereof, of general obligation bonds of the Board. $ MAXIMUM PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF THE GEN- 259,900 $ERAL OBLIGATION Sellers will pay BONDS5000 towards buyers closing costs. If approved by eligible For Sale voters at the Bond Elec- tion, the Board intends to 5 Acre Spring Canyon Estates issue2633 general N. Mountain obligation Glen Rd., Erda 245 W. Holland Drive, Stansbury bonds in an amount not 632 SO. HAYLIE LN • TOOELE Horse property in Tooele to exceed $49,000,000, Pine Canyon Road in one or more series at one or more times. $ 117 119 310,900 101 THE TAXES, IF ANY, PROPOSED TO BE 118 PLEDGED 103 102 104 The Board proposes to 116 pledge the full faith and Beautiful rambler with open floor plan 120 credit of the District for 105 Vaulted ceilings, large kitchen & lots of space to 115 theCountry payment Home of its on gen- 4.89 Acre horse property enjoy family & friends. 121 Lots of extras including high grade granite coun- $ 122 eral obligation bonds 349,900 tertops, surround sound & more $ 114 127 and may be obligated to 525,000 123 106 levy and collect ad valo- Droubay Road rem taxes sufficient to 126 55 E. Main, Ophir 125 pay the general obliga- 112 124 113 107 tion5652 bonds, N. as Poppyprovided Cir., Stansbury by law. TIME, PLACE AND LO- 111 110 109 108 CATION OF PUBLIC East Bench Rambler, 6 Bedrooms, 3 1/2 Baths, HEARING The Board will hold a Master Suite, Extra wide and deep Garage. public hearing at a meet- 15 beautiful 5 acre lots with ing scheduled to begin at amazing views still available 7:00 p.m. on September 8, 2015. The public hear- List your home here, give me a call! Use your own builder or one of ours. ing will be held at the District!s Beautifuloffices, located Home on quiet circle Amazing Home in Ophir 3 bedrooms, 2 family rooms. Really beautiful. $ at Beautiful 92 Lodestone Large open Way, home with fantastic family Starting at areas located on a quiet circle. 99,000 Tooele, Utah. All mem- $419,900 2898 sq. ft. $299,900 bers of the public are in- vited to attend and par- ticipate in the public Call Laramiehearing. Prior to the pub- Dunn lic hearing, written com- For any of your Call LaramieRealtypath Dunnments 2014 for may topbe ALLsubmitted producer in Utah to the Board, to the at- real estate Number 1 tentionagent of for the BusinessRealtypath in Utah your Real EstateAdministrator, needs 92 Lode- needs, call stone Way, Tooele, Utah 84074. Shane Bergen 435-224-4000DATED August 11, 2015. BOARD OF EDUCA- TION OF TOOELE HotHomesTooele.comCOUNTY SCHOOL DIS- 435-840-0344 TRICT, UTAH (Published in the Tran- script Bulletin August 18 & 25, 2015) B10 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN TUESDAY August 25, 2015 PHOTOS SUE BUTTERFIELD Lake Point continued from page B1

Rolla Fryer (above) waves from his 1938 tractor in the Lake Point Days parade Saturday morning. Christine Hope (top right) waves from her kart in the parade. Bryce Bradfield (right) pushed Lucy Monson in his wheelbarrow in the parade.

Brooke and Eliza King (above left) were part of the King Family Twirl Girls in the parade. Emily Cunningham (right) rode in the parade and led her horse Josie for the pony rides at the park afterward.

Hadlee Ricks (above) holds one of her family’s chickens while she waits for the start of the parade Saturday morning. Ninety- four-year-old Stan Allen (left) keeps cool at the park.