Silver Sage serves up delicious food and fun See B1 TOOELETRANSCRIPT S  T  C BULLETIN S  TUESDAY January 29, 2019 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 125 No. 69 $1.00 $2.8M approved to widen westbound I-80 Auxiliary lane will be built between SR-201 and Exit 99

STEVE HOWE STAFF WRITER by reducing the current weav- est in several projects along the A hurdle in the process to ing pattern used by the com- stretch of I-80 between SR-36 expand westbound Interstate muters from Tooele County.” and SR-201. Work continues 80 between exits 101 and The Transportation to replace the overpass at Exit 99 was cleared last Friday Committee approved the $2.8 99 and two railroad overpass as the Utah Transportation million for the project as a bridges just east of Exit 101. Commission approved $2.8 new project to be added to the Both projects are slated for million for the project during 2019 Statewide Transportation completion this year. its monthly meeting. Improvement Program. The During Friday’s meet- The funding will create funding for the project is $1.1 ing, the Utah Transportation a westbound auxiliary lane million in Highway Safety Committee briefly discussed between the exits at state Improvement fund money, the projects in the area. Work Route 201 and state Route 36, $1 million in unprogrammed on the temporary bridge to be according to documents from highway safety improvement installed during the replace- the meeting in the Salt Lake funding and $700,000 from ment of the railroad overpass County Council Room. The Region 2 transportation solu- bridges is expected to begin in additional lane is intended to tions. FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO ® “improve safety at this location The auxiliary lane is the lat- SEE I-80 PAGE A8 UDOT will add a lane to westbound I-80 from the SR201 interchange to exit 99. The project is slated for 2019.

Year ends with local home prices, sales up

TIM GILLIE according to statistics from STAFF WRITER the Wasatch Front Regional The median sales price of Multiple Listing Service. homes in Tooele County dur- Home sales and prices for ing the fourth quarter of 2018 the entire year of 2018 remain was up compared to the fourth ahead of 2017 with an aver- quarter of 2017, but for the age sales price of $275,909 in first time since the second 2018 compared to $243,152 quarter of 2017 the current in 2017, an increase of 13.5 quarterly sales price dropped percent. The total homes sold from the previous quarter of in Tooele County during 2018 the same year, according to was 1,395, which is 2.1 per- sales statistics. cent up from 2017’s average The total number of homes sales price of $243,152. sold in the fourth quarter of The decline in home sales 2018 dropped from 366 in price for the fourth quarter of the fourth quarter of 2018 to 2018 and the decline in home Dave Stamey of Orange Grove, California, performs “Desert Train” during Saturday’s Western Music and Songwriter’s Series 323 in 2018’s fourth quarter at Deseret Peak Complex. The sold out weekend event featured several performers, cowboy poets, and a chili contest. for an 11.7 percent decline, SEE SALES PAGE A8 ® WESTERN MUSIC AND SONGWRITERS CONCERT PHOTOS DANIEL PACHECO Western music stars converged at Deseret Peak Complex on Saturday for the 6th Annual Western Music Songwriters Series. School board to Dave Stamey, Western Music Association’s seven-time Entertainer of the Year, made his first appearance at the event. He was named Best Living Western Solo Musician for four negotiate proposed consecutive years by True West Magazine and is a recipient of the Will Rogers Award from the Academy of Western Artists. business park’s Other top musicians included Trinity Seely, who has received numerous awards for her music. Seely’s song “Cowboy’s Wage” is archived at the Cowboy Hall of Fame Museum in tax incentive plan Oklahoma City. In addition to Saturday’s festival, the first Western Music and Songwriters Youth Showcase TIM GILLIE Campus. was held Friday at Bonneville Brewery in STAFF WRITER Tax increment financing Tooele. Friday’s featured performers included Tooele County School involves the district foregoing a 12-year-old guitarist Vanessa Carpenter and District has agreed to portion of its property tax from 12-year-old poet Colton Blankman. Cowboy poet “play nice in the sand- the increase in the property’s Trinity Seely (above) Thatch Elmer, 14, was the host. box” with Tooele County’s value for a specified period of of Cascade, Montana, The Best of the West Chili Cook-off was also Redevelopment Agency as the time as the property is devel- performs “Grandpa” held in conjunction with Saturday’s performanc- county’s RDA works with a oped. along with Dave Stamey es. Proceeds from the show and chili cook-off developer to establish a 900- “This is different than some and special guest Butch will support the Bit n’ Spur Junior Riding Club acre business park on Sheep of things we’ve asked to agree Hause. Tyler Guy (right program. in red shirt), producer of Lane. to in the past,” said Scott the Western Music and The Tooele County School Bryan, school board member. Songwriter’s Series, con- Board voted during its Jan. 22 “It’s 900 acres and it’s not for a gratulates Jerry Hurst meeting to approve a resolu- single business. There is some after he was presented tion that commits the school risk mitigation here. We’re not the second annual D district to negotiate an agree- agreeing tonight to a specific Bar T Memorial Award. ment with the county’s RDA dollar amount or percentage, Hannah Pace and Clay for the use of tax increment but we’re just saying we’re Baker (far right) of Berk, financing to support a business going to play nice in the sand- Nevada, traveled to park on property owned by the box and be supportive and Tooele to see their favor- ite singers perform . Romney Group on Sheep Lane across from Utah Motorsports SEE PARK PAGE A9 ®

INSIDE BULLETIN BOARD B4 CLASSIFIEDS B6 Tooele Chamber Tooele Tech GHS boys finish HOMETOWN B1 holds annual prepares for second in region OBITUARIES A6 installation and new POST See A10 OPEN FORUM A4 award banquet program SPORTS A10 See A2 See A3 A2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY January 29, 2019 Chamber of Commerce presents annual awards, installs officers

TIM GILLIE STAFF WRITER The Tooele County Chamber of Commerce, which repre- sents over 400 businesses, held its annual installation banquet and awards ceremony Friday night in The Legends Hall at Utah Motorsports Campus. The chamber recognized Darin Smith, a certified physi- cian assistant who practices with Dr. Charles Holt in Tooele City, as its 2019 Citizen of the Year. “He goes above and beyond with all of his patients, treat- ing them personally and SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO making house calls,” read Mountain West Medical Center CEO Phil Eaton addresses the audience SharLynn Mueller from nomi- after receiving the 2018 Business of the Year Award. nation forms submitted for Smith. Smith was not present to receive the award due to fam- ily concerns. The chamber presented its SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO Lifetime Achievement Award Carl Justesen receives the 2018 Customer Service Award from Jared Hamner and Tyson Hamilton at the 2019 to Sid Hullinger. Installation Banquet and Award Ceremony on Friday night. “Sid’s list of community service includes serving on a Ranch for three years, and has invested in offering better give very informative tours number of county and state also served on the Wasatch options locally for health care of the museum and provide boards and committees,” said Front Private Industry Council ... They sponsor events in the scholarships for students, Jared Hamner, executive direc- that helped secure training for community ... They ask ques- according to Marshall. tor of the chamber. people looking for jobs. tions of their entire staff on “They are the caretaker of Hullinger was appointed In Nevada, Hullinger improving their service,” read Grantsville’s history,” Marshall to the Utah Citizen’s Advisory chaired a United Way drive the nominations for Mountain said. Commission on Chemical and the White Pine County West Medical Center. Tooele City’s Community Weapons Demilitarization by Adult Education Council, was Carl Justesen, with Mario Service Award winner was then-Gov. Mike Leavitt. He a member of the United Way Tires, received the Customer Pastor Mark Runyon of the received a citation from Gov. board of directors and served Service Award. New Life Christian Fellowship. Gary Herbert upon the com- on the Board of Directors for The Volunteer of the Year Tooele City Mayor Debbie pletion of the commission’s Eastern Nevada Community Award went to Lorina Bishop, Winn listed several commu- work in 2012. College. In 1972 he was of the Insurance Network and nity services provided by the SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO He also served on the named Outstanding Young president of the Tooele Valley New Life Christian Fellowship Tyson Hamilton and Jared Hamner present Lorina Bishop with the 2018 Citizens Advisory Council on Man of the Year for White Rotary Club. under Runyon’s leadership, Volunteer of the Year Award. Privatizing the Tooele Army Pine County and the state of The Chamber’s Ambassador who has been its pastor since Depot Vehicle Maintenance Nevada. of the Year was Kathy Klein. 2008: a community clothes Facility after it was closed by Hullinger remains active Grantsville, Tooele City, and closet, an annual coat drive, the Base Realignment and with the Barrick Foundation Tooele County each presented a food pantry, Thanksgiving Closure Commission; was a that awards about 10 schol- a community service award meals, a partner with Toys for member of the advisory board arships a year to students during the chamber’s annual Tots, a shower and laundry for the Pine Canyon Boys at Tooele, Stansbury and dinner. facility for homeless people, Grantsville high schools. Tooele County’s Community hosting a monthly medical and Hullinger graduated from Service Award went to the vision clinic, a mobile food CORRECTION Tooele High School and Utah Tooele County Tourism Tax service for homebound people, State University. He worked for Advisory Board. a Saturday morning pancake A photograph titled Kennecott in human resources The advisory board has breakfast, youth programs, “Historical Performance” and industrial and union worked countless hours on and pregnancy care that pro- on page A8 in Thursday’s relationships before we went approving tourism grants and vides options to abortion. edition should have read: to work with his father and working with the county’s After the awards presenta- Stansbury Park Elementary father’s partner at McFarland tourism consultant to prepare tions the Chamber installed its student Tate Fawson was and Hullinger, a mining, truck- the county’s first tourism board and officers for 2019. in character as George ing and dirt moving business brand campaign, according to The officers are: Tyson SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO Washington during a short in Tooele County. Tooele County Commissioner Hamilton, of Another Man’s play performed at the “Sid is an example of char- Shawn Milne. Treasure as chairman; Maggie Kathy Klein receives the 2018 Ambassador of the Year Award from Jared Hamner and Tyson Hamilton. Tooele County School Board acter, integrity, and inner Grantsville Mayor Brent Mondragon, of Hometown meeting on Tuesday night. drive. He is a loving man that Marshall presented the Values Magazine, as first The Transcript Bulletin loves to help others,” said Grantsville Community vice chairwoman; SharLynn Chamber of Commerce Board Technology College’s Business regrets the error. Bruce Cummings. Service Award to the Twenty Mueller, with Utah State of Directors include: Tracy Resource Center; Carolyn The Business of the Year Wells Chapter of the Sons of University - Tooele, as second Shaw, Snowie Shaw Shack; Forbes, of Valley Family Award went to Mountain West the Utah Pioneers. vice chairwoman; and Marty Tom Dye, Dependable Oxygen Medicine; Brock Griffith, of Medical Center. The Twenty Wells Chapter Brockman, of Mountain West Company; Herb Davila, D Christensen and Griffith; and TOOELE TRANSCRIPT “Mountain West Medical has been instrumental in the Medical Center, as secretary- Old Time Barbershop; Cole Aceneth Warner, of A. Warner BULLETIN Center is interested in the upkeep and renovation of the treasurer. Houghton, of Tate Mortuary; Homes Real Estate. health of the community and Donner Reed Museum. They The 2019 Tooele County Jess Clifford, with Tooele [email protected] ADMINISTRATION Scott C. Dunn Publisher Joel J. Dunn Publisher Emeritus OFFICE Bruce Dunn Controller Chris Evans Office Manager Vicki Higgins Customer Service Salt Lake men Fire damages detached garage EDITORIAL STEVE HOWE on scene, they discovered a walls may still be structurally David Bern Editor STAFF WRITER detached, single-car garage sound. Darren Vaughan Sports Editor charged with theft A fire caused significant engulfed in flames. While fire crews battled the Francie Aufdemorte Photo Editor damage to a detached garage The fire was knocked down blaze, the northbound lanes on Tim Gillie Staff Writer STEVE HOWE County Sheriff’s Office for on Main Street late Thursday by crews within 10 minutes Main Street were temporarily Steve Howe Staff Writer STAFF WRITER further questioning, accord- evening, according to the of arriving, according to closed, Harrison said. There Mark Watson Correspondent Two Salt Lake County men ing to the statement. When Tooele City Fire Department. Harrison. Seven firefighters were no injuries to firefighters ADVERTISING made their initial appearanc- interviewed, the suspects Firefighters were dispatched and two engines responded to or civilians as a result of the Clayton Dunn Advertising Manager es in 3rd District Court this told detectives they had over to a home near the intersec- the fire, with no mutual aid fire. Keith Bird Advertising Sales week after they were alleg- 200 pounds of wire, which tion with 400 South and Main required. The cause of the fire is still Dianna Bergen Advertising Sales & edly in possession of stolen was stolen from a business Street at 10:27 p.m., Tooele Harrison said the roof of under investigation. Classified Advertising Manager items including a motorcycle, north of Interstate 80 and City Fire Chief Rick Harrison the garage was completely [email protected] LAYOUT & DESIGN all-terrain vehicle and wire. state Route 201, they intend- said. When crews arrived destroyed in the fire but the John Hamilton Creative Director Benjamin Shawn Marqu ed to scrap. Liz Arellano Graphic Artist Gober, 47, of West Valley Detectives were able to PRODUCTION City, and Richard Dickerson, compare the suspects’ foot- Perry Dunn Pre-press Manager 44, of Magna, are both prints with those found at Darwin Cook Web Press Manager charged with second-degree the scene of the theft and Dan Coats Pre-press Technician felony receive or transfer a they matched, the probable New details coming Monday Scott Spence Insert Technician stolen vehicle, two counts cause statement said. The of third-degree felony theft two suspects said they were SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $1.00 per copy; $40 per year delivered by receiving stolen prop- still wearing the same clothes by carrier in Tooele, Grantsville, Erda, erty and one misdemeanor as when they took the wire. in Nevada killings of 4 people Stockton, Lake Point and Stansbury Park, Utah; $45 per year by mail in Tooele count of theft by receiving Deputies also discovered County, Utah; $77 per year by mail in the stolen property. Gober is also the men were using a skid RENO, Nev. (AP) — Nevada lier this month. Gerald and killings in Nevada showed the . charged with an additional steer stolen from Stansbury prosecutors were develop- Sharon David, two prominent need for his proposed U.S.- OFFICE HOURS: count of third-degree felony Park on the Erickson Road ing a strategy Monday for the members of the Reno Rodeo Mexico border wall, which was Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., closed Saturday and Sunday. theft by receiving stolen property, the statement said. prosecution of a 19-year-old Association, were 81 and 80, at the center of the federal gov- property. A stolen dump trailer from Salvadoran immigrant identi- respectively. ernment shutdown. CLASSIFIEDS DEADLINE: 4:45 p.m. day prior to publication. Tooele County Sheriff’s Magna, a yellow motorcycle fied as the prime suspect in The report filed with a judge Carson City Sheriff Ken PUBLIC NOTICES DEADLINE: deputies were dispatched to from Salt Lake County and four recent killings. in Carson City last week says Furlong said earlier that 4 p.m. day prior to publication. North Erickson Road on Jan. an ATV from West Valley City Wilber Ernesto Martinez- the handgun is also believed Martinez-Guzman’s only COMMUNITY NEWS ITEMS, 17 on reports of a possible were found on the property Guzman has been jailed since to have been used to kill two known contact with authori- BULLETIN BOARD, ETC.: structure fire, according to as well. his arrest more than a week women in the rural town of ties was a speeding ticket last 3 p.m. day prior to publication. a probable cause statement. Dickerson’s initial appear- ago, and he has admitted kill- Gardnerville, south of Carson February. OBITUARY DEADLINE: When deputies arrived, they ance in 3rd District Court ing at least two with a gun he City. The murder investiga- 10 a.m. day of publication. found two men, later identi- before Judge Matthew Bates stole from their Reno home. The .22-caliber revolver was tion began Jan. 10, when Publication No. (USPS 6179-60) issued twice a week at Tooele City, Utah. Periodicals fied as Gober and Dickerson, was delayed until Tuesday He was charged Thursday with recovered from a car Martinez- 56-year-old Connie Koontz postage paid at Tooele, Utah. Published by who were burning wire in after he was held in custody possessing weapons and selling Guzman was driving when he was found dead in her home in the Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company, the backyard of a home. under a different name. jewelry belonging to several was arrested Jan. 19 in Carson Gardnerville. Three days later, Inc., 58 North Main Street, Tooele City, Utah. Address all correspondence to P.O. Box 390, During the investigation, Gober was assigned a victims. City. the body of 74-year-old Sophia Tooele City, Utah 84074. deputies learned the wire public defender and his bail Prosecutors say they’ll He was charged Thursday Renken was discovered in her POSTMASTER: had been stolen from a busi- was set at $10,000 during his announce their prosecution with possessing weapons and home about a mile (1.6 kilo- Send change of address to: ness the same morning, the initial appearance Monday plans at noon on Monday. selling jewelry belonging to meters) from Koontz’s house. PO Box 390 Tooele, Utah 84074-0390 statement said. The wire was morning. He was scheduled Authorities have said Martinez- some of the dead and is being Both women were fatally shot. 435-882-0050 Fax 435-882-6123 also in the back of a truck to return to court for a sched- Guzman was in the U.S. ille- held in the Carson City jail The dead Reno couple was email: [email protected] and trailer parked in front of uling conference on Tuesday gally. on $500,000 bail. His newly found less than a week later. or visit our website extension at the house. at 9 a.m. before Bates. A sheriff’s investiga- appointed public defense attor- One felony charge against www.tooeletranscript.com Gober and Dickerson were [email protected] tive report obtained by ney, Karin Kreizenbeck, has Martinez-Guzman alleges he Entire contents ©2019 Transcript Bulletin transported to the Tooele The Associated Press says declined comment. had several belt buckles bear- Publishing Company, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may Martinez-Guzman admitted President Donald Trump ing their names that were val- be reproduced in any form without the killing the Reno couple ear- tweeted this week that the four ued at up to $3,500. written consent of the editor or publisher. TUESDAY January 29, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A3 Future law enforcement, correction officers can now train in Tooele Tooele Technical College will start offering POST certification in March TIM GILLIE “It will almost have an in- STAFF WRITER service feel to some employ- Tooele Technical College has ees,” said Tooele City Police opened a doorway in Tooele Chief Ron Kirby. “We are able County for residents who want to combine our field train- to become law enforcement ing and our in-house training officers. with the state police academy POST — Police Officer training through Tooele Tech’s Standards and Training — program.” certification will be offered at Tooele Tech’s POST program Tooele Technical College start- is a fully functioning police ing in March. academy offering day classes Tooele Tech’s satellite POST Monday-Friday, 40 hours per Academy will provide train- week. Classes begin at 7 a.m. ing for special function offi- with a one-hour lunch break FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTOS cers, basic corrections officer, and conclude at 4 p.m. Director Sheldon Riches (above) and law enforcement officer. The director of Tooele Tech’s explains the new POST program at Students can choose to com- POST Satellite Academy is Tooele Technical College at an open house for prospective students plete one, two, or all three Sheldon Riches. held Monday night at the school. levels of training, according to Riches had a 27-year law Shelby and Joe Garcia (upper Tooele Tech officials. career with the Utah Highway right) look through an information “I’m very supportive of the Patrol. During that time, Riches booklet for the Tooele City Police POST program coming to served in many capacities, one Department at the open house. Tooele Technical College,” said of which was a sergeant in the Lt. Regina Nelson (right) talks with Tooele County Sheriff Paul Utah Highway Patrol training Alyssa Hopper about open posi- Wimmer. “Having other oppor- section where he enjoyed train- tions at the Tooele County Sheriff’s tunities for people to become ing the new troopers for six Office. certified and trained within the years. law enforcement profession Riches is a native resident practitioner. will not only help locally, but of Green River, Utah, and has The physical fitness stan- it’s going to help statewide” lived in many communities dards include a vertical jump of Currently there are 223 job throughout the state. 14.5 inches, 23 sit-ups in one openings statewide for police Admission requirements minute, 14 push-ups with no and sheriff patrol officers, include completion of the time limit, and a 1.5 mile run according to the Department of National Police Officer in 16.11 minutes. Workforce Services. Selection Test, which is offered Students wishing to enter Over the next 10 years, at the Tooele Tech campus. It the program will need to com- the Department of Workforce can be scheduled by contacting plete an application found at Services expects an annual Tooele Tech. post.utah.gov. opening of 420 jobs for police POST students must be Additional information is and sheriff patrol officers. 21 years old, pass the physi- available at Tooele Tech’s web- Law enforcement agencies in cal training standards, pass a site at tooeletech.edu. Tooele County will be directly background check, and have [email protected] involved in the POST Academy a physical signed by a doctor, at Tooele Tech. physician assistant, or nurse

COURTESY OF GRANTSVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Left to right: Tooele City Police Officer Nick Cutler; Walmart volunteers, Corie Amaya and Todd Offill; Grantsville City Police Sgt. Lydon Allred, and Grantsville City Polie Chief Jacob Enlsen pose with a $5,00 check pre- sented to the Shop with a Cop program. Walmart makes $5K donation to Shop with a Cop program

STEVE HOWE a Cop, the VAP grants range STAFF WRITER from $500 to $5,000, depend- A program that matches ing on the number of associ- volunteer contributions with ates involved and the hours a monetary donation has net- volunteered, according to the ted $5,000 for Tooele County 2018 program guidelines. A law enforcement’s Shop With a minimum of five associates Cop program. and 25 hours are required to Last Wednesday, law be eligible for the VAP grant. enforcement officers from Walmart associates donated Grantsville City and Tooele nearly 300 hours toward Shop City police departments With a Cop, Allred said. The received a check from Walmart donation was matched finan- associates. All of the funds cially with the maximum grant donated will go straight to the award of $5,000. 2019 Shop With a Cop event, Law enforcement offi- according to Grantsville City cers from Tooele City Police Police Sgt. Lydon Allred. Department, Grantsville City The Shop With a Cop Police Department, Tooele program pairs officers with County Sheriff’s Office, families in need to buy essen- Stockton Police Department, tials and presents during the Utah Highway Patrol, Dugway holidays. All told, about 110 Police Department, and federal children were helped through Bureau of Land Management, Shop With a Cop in 2018. as well as the Tooele City Walmart’s Volunteerism Law Enforcement Exploring Always Pays program turns Program participated in Shop volunteer hours by their full- With a Cop last December. time and part-time associates The program is also funded into financial donations for through private donations tax-exempt organizations or from citizens and the fund- recognized public entities like raiser Tip a Cop, where officers schools, churches and police or work as servers and all tips are fire departments. donated to the program. For an event like Shop With [email protected]

Your Complete Local News Source Tooele Transcript Bulletin Subscribe 435-882-0050 A4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY January 29, 2019

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

OUR VIEW Behind the wheel Let local, state officials know how you feel about transportation needs at Thursday night meeting For thousands of Tooele County residents, the daily commute to and from the Wasatch Front for work is a big source of anguish. Interstate 80 and state Routes 36 and 138 are often choked with stop-and-go traffic every morning and evening. And whenever there’s an accident on one of those routes, the commute can come to a halt — often and inconveniently for an hour or more. But a public meeting this coming Thursday at Tooele City Hall may some- day help improve rush hour traffic flows and ease commuters’ pain. As reported in last Thursday’s edition, the Wasatch Front Regional Council and local leaders are asking area citizens to provide input on a draft, long-range transportation plan for the county. The draft plan, and a map showing proposed project areas, will be dis- played during an open house Thursday at Tooele City Hall, 90 N. Main St., from 4:30-6:30 p.m. A representative will be there to answer questions. The open house is part of a public comment period that began on Jan. 14 and runs through Feb. 13. The plan is also available for review online as an interactive map at wfrc.org/tvlrtp-2019-draft. A visitor to the website can simply click on a project to see basic information and leave an anonymous comment. Dozens of comments about the map have already been posted on the site and officials encourage more. The draft plan includes several proposed projects for new routes or to expand existing roads. It includes the $75 million Midvalley Highway and an alternate connection along I-80 between Lake Point and state Route 201. Midvalley Highway construction is expected to begin this year with Phase One, which will create a new on and off ramp five miles west of Lake Point LETTERS TO THE EDITOR and connect I-80 with state Route 138. The plan also includes a proposed widening of I-80 from Lake Point to Weather accurately represented Throughout the years, I trespass righteously point out to my lovely SR-201 (see related front-page story), and between SR-36 and the Midvalley Over the years, I can’t help but note the large field between our residence wife, when relating the actual depth Highway. the discrepancies in issues, objectiv- and the Depot in logging in the 4 in South Tooele to be 10.5 inches plus The draft plan proposes an extension of Droubay Road from Bates Canyon ity in reporting, and the mishmash miles that I, without fail rain, snow, traces for that day. The difference in Road to Center Street, and the Oquirrh Expressway, which would connect of statistics that can be convoluted or sunshine, log in daily over the depth of 2 inches was so obvious that with Droubay Road north of Mills Junction and just north of 2400 North. in attempting to create a biased illu- course, which takes in the deteriorat- even my CTR4 class could tell. It is According to the Wasatch Front Regional Council, the draft plan features sion. In last Tuesday’s edition of the ing asphalt of the old Tooele Airport. with appreciation that I now feel the two decades of future road projects, which will require design and funding Transcript Bulletin, it was related that I take note of all those three items residents of South Tooele have now to move forward. On the map, dashed lines represent proposed new con- the official, absolute, nationally rec- mentioned above, as well as the been accurately represented. struction and solid lines are widening existing roads. Dotted lines represent ognized snow depth for Tooele City gross variation in the reported wind Ralph E. Pierce bicycle or pedestrian lanes. was 8.6 inches. After making a visual speeds in South Tooele as reported at Tooele For citizens who use Utah Transit Authority buses for commuting, the scan of the locations around CAL the other Tooele locations. This also draft plan also includes a feasibility study on high-capacity transit between Ranch, as well as the hospital, this reflects the year when the wind blew Tooele and Salt Lake counties. would probably be true. However, we so hard it snapped six power poles at Because Tooele County’s population growth is expected to continue, in the south and higher end of Tooele the ground along state Route 36 in LETTERS POLICY transportation and commuting issues are likely for years to come. Solutions usually get little respect in regard to South Tooele. The Transcript-Bulletin welcomes letters to the editor from readers. Letters must be no won’t come quickly, easily or cheaply, which is why it is vital that citizens weather statistics in regard to pre- On three occasions between 2005 longer than 250 words, civil in tone, written participate in Thursday’s open house or online. cipitation depth, wind velocity, and and 2015, there was a difference of exclusively for the Transcript-Bulletin, and The Wasatch Front Regional Council and local leaders are commended outside ambient temperature. 16 degrees Fahrenheit in the tempera- accompanied by the writer’s name, address for seeking public input on the draft plan and map. But the meeting’s time After all the kids left in 2005, I ture at our residence and the tracks. and phone number. Longer letters may be published, based on merit and at the Editor’s of 4:30-6:30 p.m. on Thursday isn’t long enough. Commuters who want to initiated my own scientific weather Once it was 4 degrees (residence) as discretion. All letters may be subject to editing. attend, but are delayed by congestion or an accident, may likely miss out. reporting service regarding South opposed to -12 (at the tracks), which Letters written to thank an individual or Tooele. Erected about 30 feet behind are also located within the confines of organization should be submitted for our residence and 6 feet above the Tooele City. The reported low that day “Notes of Appreciation.” ground was placed an electronic was 6 degrees. My point is that there Readers who are interested in writing a longer GUEST OPINION weather station backed up by con- are more empirical means of report- guest op-ed column on a topic of general ventional nail up thermometers both ing data such as taking measurements interest should contact Editor David Bern. outside our residence as well as upon at maybe three different locations in Email: [email protected] telephone poles located along the gathering objective statistics. Fax: (435) 882-6123 railroad tracks bordering and run- It was also a great thrill for me to Mail: Letters to the Editor Get over it. Trump’s Tooele Transcript-Bulletin ning through the Defense Depot. The note the discrepancy in the reported P.O. Box 390 tracks are .8 of a mile west of our snow level of 8.6 inches of snow on Tooele, UT 84074 not going anywhere home. Jan. 21, which I was able to very self

he walls supposedly are always closing in on Donald GUEST OPINION TTrump. The end is always beginning. He’s going to quit. He’s going to be impeached and removed. He’s Trump needs to rein in neocons going to decide not to run again. Somehow or other, he’s going to relieve everyone of the responsibility of ever thinking of him again, and within his administration especially of the responsibility of defeating him in an election. is perpetually furious and feeling resident Donald Trump cam- chief, so why is his secretary of state Such scenarios are a constant besieged, he has never shown the paigned on the promise of pull- now redefining the mission as expel- topic in private conversations. The slightest brittleness or sense of being Ping America out of foreign con- ling Iran from Syria? allure is obvious. It is the promise overwhelmed in public. He’s always flicts. He recently took a step toward Rachel Marsden It’s not America’s business to expel of deliverance. After tormenting his his same ebullient, combative, outra- keeping that promise by announcing GUEST COLUMNIST Iran from Syria. Iran worked with enemies for so long, Trump’s going geous self. plans to withdraw troops from Syria, Russia in Syria to defeat ISIS. Syria to make it easy for them. He’s just He’s the least likely president to and there are reports that he’s also isn’t asking for America’s help in going to go away. get worn down by an impeachment evaluating a potential troop with- rational and the only correct solu- expelling Iran. It has its own allies to It is true that the odds of Trump fight. What would discourage or drawal from Afghanistan. tion to this issue would be to put assist in that endeavor, if it chooses somehow not serving out his term deflate the normal human energizes Trump’s instincts are correct. [Kurdish] territories under the con- to ask. Syria is a sovereign country are, given his erratic personality him. However, there are forces within trol of the Syrian government, Syrian that has the right to decide which and the wild card of the Mueller The same applies even more to his his administration itching for war armed forces and Syrian administra- foreign entities are welcome within investigation, higher than those for a running for re-election. After endur- with Iran, or just for war in general. tive structures with the understand- it. But how do you evict a heavily normal president serving in normal ing several years of having to govern, They aren’t going to give up on their ing that the Kurds should be provid- armed 250-pound brute who’s intent times. But they are still slim. not his natural aptitude, why would dreams that easily. Trump needs to ed with all the necessary conditions on staying to play policeman? Perhaps special counsel Robert he throw away the opportunity to shut all back doors that could lead in the places of their traditional Can neocons ever just leave the Mueller’s report will send a torpedo campaign, which he clearly relishes? to any American fighters remaining residence,” Russian Foreign Minister Middle East alone? It doesn’t seem into Trump’s bow. It seems more Because he’d be convinced he’d after a formal withdrawal. Sergey Lavrov said last week. so, based on regional history. How likely that a report will contain dam- lose? Short of a Mueller catastro- The average American doesn’t care Lavrov also noted that the U.S. has can we trust that they’re not going aging and embarrassing revelations phe, this doesn’t seem very likely. about war in the Middle East. That’s established two dozen military bases to go behind Trump’s back and that, whatever the initial shock, will Remember: All sorts of people tried for countries in that region to deal in the Kurdish zone and has left a authorize covert operations that cir- be quickly absorbed by the political to convince him he’d lose last time, with. There is not a single entity in ton of weapons there as a result of cumvent the Pentagon? Such covert system and especially Trump’s sup- and they were all wrong. Having the Middle East that poses an exis- supplying the Kurds. Is that what the operations led to years of conflict in porters. won the presidency once polling tential threat to the United States. neocons are intent on preserving by Latin America with little or nothing The velocity of the news cycle, at a little over 40 percent in the America’s Middle Eastern allies have pressuring Trump into establishing a to show for it. driven in part by the sheer volume RealClearPolitics average, he’d sure- purchased more than enough U.S.- buffer zone in the area? Any attempts to extend neocon and pace of Trump controversies, ly figure that he could do it again. made weapons over the years to han- A buffer zone established under interests in Syria (or anywhere else works in his favor. For any president, winning a sec- dle the situation without any further humanitarian pretext can become a in the Middle East) through anything The resignation of Jim Mattis ond term is the highest validation. assistance from American taxpayers. vacuum from which further shenani- other than the formal presence of rocked Trump’s administration to the Trump, so sensitive to status, must It figures that as soon as Trump gans can be launched — which is uniformed troops explicitly invited core — for all of about 36 hours. And feel this imperative more than most. decided to pull American troops out why neocons love buffer zones. For by the country they occupy would does anyone remember the revela- Besides all this, no one should of Syria, the neocon proponents of neocons hell-bent on war with Iran, be the very definition of propagating tion that talks over a Trump Tower really hope for a premature end to forever wars convinced him to keep Syria has never been anything more terrorism. Those who support such project in Moscow went on longer the Trump presidency. Whatever the troops there until the U.S. received than a gateway to war with Iran any- activities would be no different than than first realized? Probably not. circumstances, it’d be a trauma to assurances that Turkish forces way. the terrorists they claim to be fight- Why would Trump ever quit? This the republic and not accepted by a wouldn’t harm the Syrian Kurds. Trump’s national security adviser, ing. is a man who has fought and clawed significant plurality of the electorate. Look, Syria has a government. It John Bolton, has repeatedly ranted These warmongering neocons for every ounce of public atten- The wish fulfillment of Trump’s crit- once again controls nearly the entire against Iran at rallies here in Paris seem to view the Trump presidency tion — good or bad — he can get ics is better directed toward the less country. It also has an army. The hosted by the Iranian opposition. as a crowbar to pry open the U.S. throughout his adult life, and now, spectacular, yet difficult-enough task Kurds in Syria have explicitly turned Last September, he reportedly asked Treasury in furtherance of their own occupying the biggest bully pulpit of beating him in 2020. to the Syrian government for protec- the Pentagon to draw up plans for interests. Trump needs to tell them on the planet, he’s just going to walk tion, making an appeal to President striking Iran, according to the Wall there will be no American involve- away? Rich Lowry is editor of the National Bashar al-Assad. Why is America get- Street Journal. U.S. Secretary of ment in these foreign conflicts, either Despite media reports that Trump Review. ting involved? State Mike Pompeo told an audi- covert or overt, after the withdrawal Moreover, Russia — a regional ence in Cairo earlier this month that of uniformed troops. partner that was invited by the the mission was to “expel every last EDITORIAL BOARD Syrian government to establish a Iranian boot” from Syria. Rachel Marsden is a columnist, Joel J. Dunn Scott C. Dunn David J. Bern presence in the country, at least until Wasn’t Syria supposed to be about political strategist and former Fox Publisher Emeritus President and Publisher Editor this mess is sorted out — is also guar- defeating the Islamic State? Trump News host based in Paris. She is the With the exception of the “Our View” column, the opinions expressed on this page, anteeing protection for the Kurds. said that mission has been accom- host of the syndicated talk show including the cartoon, are not necessarily endorsed by the Tooele Transcript Bulletin. “We are convinced that the most plished. Trump is the commander in “Unredacted with Rachel Marsden.” TUESDAY January 29, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A5

GUEST OPINION Thought crimes, media abuse and Catholic boys hat exactly triggered “This is a bad day for the “There was that moment when I realized as a hateful smirk of privilege. that hateful leftist news media,” said CNN legal CNN legal analyst Bakari social media mob — analyst Jeffrey Toobin. “The I’ve put myself between beast and prey.” Sellers wanted the boys to be W John Kass shamefully egged on by promi- larger message that a lot of - Nathan Phillips punched. GUEST COLUMNIST nent American journalists — to people are going to take from “He is deplorable,” Sellers unjustly attack the students at this story is that the news His office issued a statement sors were Phillips himself, tweeted. “Some ppl can also be Kentucky’s Covington Catholic media are a bunch of leftist refuting the BuzzFeed story. pounding his drum and sing- punched in the face.” High School and denounce So, what happened? Why liars who are dying to get the Mueller knocked it down. ing loudly within inches of He deleted that tweet, but them as racists? were the students vilified? president, and they’re willing And so, sheepishly, with egg a Covington boy’s face, and does that erase the fact? CNN’s The school has been closed. Was it simply for the sin of to lie to do it.” on their faces, many in that several Black Hebrew Israelite Ana Navarro also deleted a Death threats and bullying being white, Roman Catholic Toobin is clearly a prophet. Democratic Media Complex protesters shouting horrible tweet that likened Covington continue. Students and family supporters of President Donald He doesn’t think it’s true that were upset and chastened. racist insults at the boys. parents to paper towels in a complain they’ve been doxed Trump, the boys having the the news media are a bunch of But nature and politics and Phillips’ credibility is becom- toilet. — their identities revealed gall to wear their “MAGA” hats leftist liars. cable news abhor a vacuum. ing shakier by the day. I don’t “Have you ever seen a more so that the hateful mob can at the March for Life? But he clearly understands And on the day of Mueller’s want to call an old man a liar punchable face than this harass them some more. Or was it something else? the meat and bones of the statement came the March when he’s playing the hero, kid’s?” asked former CNN per- thing: Americans think the for Life, with huge crowds but he’s all over the map on his sonality Reza Aslan. media lies for political reasons of people, most of them reli- facts. But it wasn’t just CNN and and journalistic credibility flies gious, many of them Christian, “There was that moment those on the left that peeled away, cawing idiotically, like a marching in protest against when I realized I’ve put myself the skin off the boys from CARING DONATIONS murder of crows. abortion. The boys from the between beast and prey,” Covington. Unfortunately, the great Covington school, in their Phillips told reporters, rather The most depressing part prophet Toobin wasn’t talking “MAGA” hats, were among dramatically. “These young of it all is that the center-right about the Covington story. them. men were beastly, and these also jumped on them hard, lest Rather, he was talking about Usually, media isn’t all that old black individuals was their they, too, be accused of sup- another story that came before interested in the March for prey, and I stood in between porting thought crimes. the Covington story. And it, Life. Media mostly leans to the them and so they needed their The National Review put too, blew up in the media’s left and employs social justice pounds of flesh and they were out a short piece online sug- face: that BuzzFeed story alleg- warriors to protect abortion looking at me for that.” gesting the boys had defiled ing that Trump had directed rights. Prey? That’s ridiculous. I their faith, as if they’d spat his smarmy fixer to lie to But this year, with the anti- won’t repeat what the Black on the cross. To its credit, the Congress. Trumpers deflated after the Hebrew Israelites said, but National Review removed the Many in the Democratic collapse of the BuzzFeed story, what they said was racist and article when it became clear Media Complex bought that something happened to lift cheap and stupid and ugly. that the boys had been the BuzzFeed story, jumped on it, their spirits. One of the students, Nick victims, rather than the aggres- reported it breathlessly, used it Those Covington High Sandmann, was unlucky sors. as a platform to pump up their School students were waiting enough to be confronted by This is the new debilitat- ratings and tease, deliciously, for their bus after the march, Phillips. Sandmann was pro- ing fear in America: being what they’ve been teasing for on the steps of the Lincoln voked, clearly, but he didn’t accused of a thought crime and so long now: Trump’s immi- Memorial, with their “MAGA” attack, he just smiled ner- attacked by cyberbarbarians. nent demise. hats. vously. You may be shamed and lose Democrats were ecstatic. If The boys were wrongfully But the way many reacted your career and have every- true, they said, Trump would and publicly accused of con- — including media — suggests thing taken away. be impeached. If true, they fronting Native American activ- they’ve never raised a child. Depending, of course, upon said, Trump was finished. If ist Nathan Phillips, because If you’re a parent, think of your politics. true, if true, if true. that was what was highlighted your child in that situation, not Then something happened. on a short video of the event being angry, not overreacting, John Kass is a columnist for It wasn’t true, according to that went viral. just standing, calmly, with a the Chicago Tribune. His Twitter PHOTO COURTESY TOOELE CIVIC LEAGUE special counsel Robert Mueller. But it turned out the aggres- nervous smile that was derided handle is @john_kass Vickie Curry (left), of the Tooele Civic League, and Kari Sorenson (right) of the Tooele County Children’s Justice Center, hold stuffed animals that were donated to the justice center in recognition of Children’s Advocacy Month last October. Office You Have Fascinating Neighbors! supplies, paper products and children’s games were also donat- ed to the justice center. In recognition of Veterans Day in Read Their Stories in Every Issue! November, the Tooele Civic League donated 15 “Mommy Bags” to the veterans hospital in , which contained TOOELE We’re Your Hometown! diapers, wipes, tissues, baby products and mother supplies to TRANSCRIPT women in the military. Subscribe Today: 435.882.0050 BULLETIN or TooeleOnline.com

Tooele Education F   S T  C  S  Full ColorOnly Copies! ¢ 24Per Copy Thank You, CARGILL! By Clint Spindler

At last week’s TCSD School Board meeting, local Cargill leadership team members Dave Gibby, Andrew Hall, Matt Potter, and Ryan Dougherty presented TEF with an extraordinary, very generous donation to help provide programs and services focused on bettering our environment and addressing social impact issues. We are in total awe Cargill check presentation to TEF at TCSD School Board of the level of dedication and Meeting 1/22/19. L-R Clint Spindler TEF, Matthew Potter commitment that our Cargill Cargill, David Gibby Cargill, Andrew Hall Cargill, Ryan friends give to TEF each year. Dougherty Cargill, Ed Dalton TEF But this time, they have really some pretty remarkable launching a capital campaign outdone themselves with a sponsors and sustaining- to raise funds for a “learning substantial, incredible six- level business partners who lodge” at the Ophir Canyon figure donation! go the extra mile to help Education Center. This Ophir Words alone are not enough TCSD students and staff have dream includes being able to to express our gratefulness and wonderful learning experiences provide an environmentally- appreciation of Cargill and all and opportunities. This kind friendly footprint in the canyon they do to be TEF champions. of ongoing, consistent support whereby students, young and We are truly blessed to have makes all the difference old alike, are able to engage in this great, sustaining-level as we work to enrich and outdoor learning experiences partnership with such amazing enhance learning within our on a year-round basis. TEF people! A large amount of community. THANK YOU, has had success with both TOOELE this unbelievable donation is to all who continue to make its summer class offerings, restricted-for-use to assist TEF commitments and sacrifices and current winter snowshoe TRANSCRIPT in its fund raising efforts to that keep TEF moving forward experiences. In addition build a school of wonder and in a progressive way! to these kinds of outdoor inquiry at the Ophir Canyon Bring in Your TEF is in the early stages of leaning opportunities, one ULLETIN Education Center. We have major educational focus of the B Digital Files Center is to have students learn more about Ophir’s essential history and culture that was made possible by the mining 58 N. Main • Tooele operations and pioneer lifestyle that Ophir is well-known for. 8:30 am to 5:30 pm • Monday – Friday If you would like to learn more about joining the journey 8.5 x 11 inch • 20# bond paper to make the Ophir dream a Some restrictions apply reality, or assist with any other TEF programs, please feel free to contact us at (435) 833-1900 x1174.

Tooele Education Foundation Highest Quality Students enjoy 3-Day Science camp at Ophir Canyon State-of-the-Art Education Center thanks to Cargill’s many sponsored @TEFbellringer Color Printing programs through TEF. Equipment! www.tooeleeducationfoundation.org A6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY January 29, 2019

OBITUARIES

Karen Charles later became MagCorp, and, late in life. She was preceded Mervin Clifford Pyne ultimately, U.S. Magnesium, in death by her parents; Hamm from which she retired after beloved sister, Linda Swartz; Mervin Clifford Pyne, 1938 – 2019 29 years. and two brothers-in-law, Jack “Chief,” age 85, passed away Karen’s first priority has Swartz and Wayne Edwards. peacefully in his home in Karen Charles Hamm always been her son, Jeff, and She is survived by her son, Tooele, Utah, on Jan. 25, 2019. passed away Jan. 24, 2019. his family. She loved spending Jeff (Tonya); her grandsons He was born Nov. 23, 1933, in She was born in Grantsville, time with her three grand- Kienan, Elijah, and Isaac; her Orem, Utah, to Walter Leroy Utah, on Oct. 11, 1938, to sons, Kienan (29), Elijah brother, Dick Charles; and and Theresia Clayton Pyne. Leona and Jesse Charles. (25), and Isaac (20). Karen her sisters, Kathy Edwards, The oldest of five siblings, he She attended Grantsville was also blessed with many Deanna Linares (Danny), loved to play with toy cars and High School while working cherished friends who helped and Mary Charles. She is also trains as a child. He grew up for her father at the fam- her through several health survived by many wonderful on a farm with chores to do, ily business in Bonneville. issues. She will be forever nieces and nephews. animals to care for and a fruit She married Richard Lee grateful for all the help and Funeral services are sched- orchard to tend. As a youth Hamm in Las Vegas, Nevada, kindnesses shown her from uled for Thursday, Jan. 31, he delivered newspapers, sold on July 2, 1962. They had family and friends too numer- at 11 a.m., at the Grantsville fruit door-to-door, worked in one son together, Jeff, who ous to mention, but who Stake Center, 550 E. Durfee a cabinet shop and a grocery was born Dec. 13, 1964. divorced, and Karen moved know who they are. Street. Viewings will be held store where he learned the ter, Melissa Pyne; grandson, The family lived in Mesa, back home to Grantsville Karen was a proud mem- Wednesday, Jan. 30 from 6–8 value of hard work. He played Dustin Pyne; great-grandson, Arizona; Blythe, California; with Jeff. Upon her return ber of The Church of Jesus p.m., and Thursday, Jan. 31 the tenor saxophone in a dance Dayton; parents, Walter and and Corona, California, until home, Karen started work- Christ of Latter-Day Saints from 10–11 a.m. prior to the band, ran track, and played Theresia Pyne; brother, Leslie 1973, when Karen and Rick ing at NL Industries, which and received her endowments funeral at the same location. tennis in high school. He met, Pyne. Mervin is survived by then married VaNeta Taylor on his children: Roland (Holly), June 19, 1953, in the Manti, David, Craig, Scot, Stacey Nigh Utah, temple. Together they (Derek); many grandchildren had five children. He loved and great-grandchildren; sis- Kay Lamond snowbird for 14 years going playing baseball with his sons, ter, Julia Groesbeck; bother, Johnson to Quartzite, Arizona. He fishing, camping, and hunting Cordell Pyne; sister, Loretta loved to go to swap meets. pheasants with his family and Nelson (Mark); sister-in-law, Kay Lamond Johnson, He is survived by his wife friends. Merv loved German Janet Pyne; and his faithful age 89, passed away Friday, Norma, and his four children; shorthair pointers, with Sadie Labrador retriever companion, Jan. 25, 2019. He was Karen (Larry) Hinkel (of being one of his favorites. He Tank. born to Ernest Lavar (Bish) Tooele), Brent Johnson (of loved his career as chief engi- A viewing will be held Johnson and Bertha Bairline Tooele), Kenneth (Rebecca) neer of telecommunications at Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2019, at Johnson on Sept. 13. 1929, Johnson (of Las Vegas), and Dugway Proving Ground. After Tate Mortuary, 110 S. Main in Elsinore, Utah. As a young Randy Johnson (of Tooele). he retired he started his own St., Tooele, Utah, from 6-8 boy, he was full of mischief. He had 11 grandchildren, 15 business, Pyne’s Chem Dry in p.m. Funeral services will be He loved to reminisce about great-grandchildren, and two 1982, eventually creating a Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2019, at his childhood. great-great-grandchildren. second company, Merv’s Floor the LDS church, 200 S, 200 Kay spent time in the U.S. At Kay’s request, a grave- Covering, where he worked West, at 11 a.m. with a view- Army and was stationed in side burial will be held until he could no longer run a ing prior from 9:30-10:45 a.m. the Panama Canal Zone. Wednesday, Jan. 30, noon, at knee kicker. He was a two-time with interment in the Tooele When he returned home, he the Tooele City Cemetery. cancer survivor. He loved his City Cemetery. Luncheon to married the love of his life, We express our sincere family, friends, coworkers, cus- follow interment at the 200 S. Norma Geane Hanson, on Gem Club. He did wood- He worked at National Lead gratitude to Canyon Health tomers and employees. He was 200 West church building. June 17, 1948. They were work and silver work making Company and then went to and Hospice in Tooele, a friend to all who knew him. The family wishes to express married for 70 and one half jewelry. He was a jack of all work at the Tooele Army and the staff of Mountain Merv would help anyone in sincere thanks to all those who years. trades. Depot from 1972 to 1991 West Hospital, also to Tate need. He was a member of The gave care to Merv over the He loved to go hunting, He worked at the when he retired. Mortuary for their kind and Church of Jesus Christ of Latter last few years. In lieu of flow- fishing, and messing around International Smelter doing Kay loved to travel, going professional service. Day Saints. He is preceded in ers, please make donations to with cars. He also enjoyed many different jobs and was to places such as Oregon and Dad we will miss you every death by his “lovely bride,” Primary Children’s Hospital in rock hunting with the Tooele a supervisor until it closed. Washington. He became a day. VaNeta Pyne; granddaugh- his name.

Suzanne Fern children and grandchildren playing the guitar and adored sister, Claudia (Sam) accomplish their goals on any singing. An amazing story- Kekauoha; nine nieces; three Edmunds Thompson road they traveled. teller, she loved to laugh with nephews; and her dog, Tika. Suzanne Fern Edmunds Suzanne was passionate for a wonderful sense of humor. She was preceded in death Thompson, age 73, passed a myriad of things. She was a Suzanne had a love of by her parents and husband, away Saturday, Jan. 26, devoted member of the LDS nature and animals. She vol- Ron. 2019, in Taylorsville, Utah. church and had a dedicated unteered at Hogle Zoo in Salt A viewing will be held at She was born to George F. love of genealogy. She was Lake City, Utah, for 10 years. Tate Mortuary, 110 S. Main Edmunds, Jr. and Beth Green very artistic in many differ- She served as president of St., Tooele, Utah, on Friday, Edmunds (Hansen) on Jan. ent mediums: crafts, paint- the zoo’s docent counselors Feb. 1, 2019, from 6-8 p.m. 9, 1946, in Salt Lake City, ing, crocheting and more. during some of those years. Funeral services will be held Utah. She was the youngest Suzanne had an affectionate She loved educating children; Saturday, Feb. 2, 2019, at of their two daughters. She love for music throughout bringing animals to schools to 11 a.m. at the Stockton LDS and her beloved sister Claudia her life. She was able to bring let them experience them first Chapel, 405 N. Connor Ave., were very close. She spent her love of music to others by hand. She helped rehabilitate Stockton, Utah, with a prior most of her youth living in serving as a primary choris- many birds of prey at the zoo viewing from 9:30-10:30 a.m. Salt Lake City and Spokane, ter for many years. She had and in her own home. She at the Stockton 1st Ward. Washington. She was in a love for the theater which passed this love of animals Interment will follow at the first graduating class friends. We are sure mom and ing the beauties of nature she began in her childhood. That and nature on to her children. Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park of Skyline High School in dad had a beautiful reunion loved so much. She will be love was also passed onto the She is survived by her in Salt Lake City at 2 p.m. 1964. She attended Stevens- after 13 years apart. Although dearly missed. youth through being involved children, RonnaLee (Bill) Special thanks to Stockton Henager College, earning a she has courageously faced She was a devoted mother with stake roadshows; help- Hesford, Ted Thompson, 1st ward, Kate Vowels, secretarial certification. She decades of illnesses — always to her five children. She said ing write plays and songs Annjanette Thompson, Carrington Court, Legacy was sealed to the love of her positive and resilient through- being a mother was her great- as well as direct. Suzanne Claudia Thompson, Janice Village, Dr. Nathan Currier, life, Ronald E. Thompson, in out — her death was sudden est joy and accomplishment. was involved with youth and Thompson; grandchildren, Jon Atkin PA., Dr. Adam the LDS Salt Lake Temple on and unexpected. Thankfully, She was proud to be a grand- people of many ages; she was Elise (Aaron) Pratt, Brent Elhadi. To leave the family a Feb. 10, 1965. They were an she no longer must endure mother and great-grandmoth- called “Mom” and “Grandma” (Emily) Hesford, Jarod Lee; message, or to view service example of everything a mar- those pains. Now she can run, er. She gave unconditional by many whose lives that she great-grandchildren, Grace information, please refer to riage should be and were best jump, smell any flower, enjoy- love to all and helped all her touched. Suzanne enjoyed Martinez, Damian Martinez; www.tatemortuary.com

NOTE OF APPRECIATION Vincente (Vince) family members, friends, and The Martinez Family for the friendship and care contributed and assisted at the co-workers who loved him would like to express their provided for our parents, Saint wonderful luncheons, VFW’s Hernandez dearly, and special “Monkey heartfelt gratitude for the Marguerite Parish staff; Father Military Service, and the Hernandez Butt” Carson. Vince was the outpouring of love given by Ken Vialpando, Deacon Rick courtesy and professionalism kindest, most gentle, loving the community at large and Huffman, Joe Bitteman and provided by Tate Mortuary. Vincente (Vince) man, who would do anything surrounding areas after the the church’s beautiful choir, You all contributed greatly to Hernandez Hernandez, to help anyone in need. lost of their parents, Fred and money donated in our parents a wonderful send off for our beloved husband, father, There will be no services at Peggy. Special thanks to Rocky honor to Saint Marguerite parents. grandfather, brother and this time. A Celebration of Life Mountain Care Hospice team Catholic School, those who God bless you all! uncle, passed away Jan. 22, will be held in the future. 2019, due to complications In lieu of flowers, donations from surgery. for medical expenses would He leaves behind his lov- be greatly appreciated at ing wife, Frances Kay Evans Zion’s Bank under Frances Kay TOOELE Delivering the News in TRANSCRIPT Hernandez, many extended Hernandez. Tooele County for More BULLETIN Than 120 Years Subscribe Today 435-882-0050

David Budd Tonioli Our fondest memories with Oct. 9, 1953 - Jan. 19, 2019 him included going to the fam- FULL SERVICE FUNERAL HOME ily cabin, riding four-wheelers, Dave passed away in Tooele chopping wood and hunting. surrounded by his family, the He also enjoyed tinkering night of Jan. 19. and finding out how things He was born in Tooele, worked. Utah, on Oct. 9, 1953, to Budd Dave was always giving to and Lucille Tonioli. He grew charity even when he didn’t up with two older brothers, have much to give. Kent (Linda) and Bob (Jean). Dave had an abundance of He was married to Shauna friends that we know would Utley in 1978. While they were like to say their goodbyes, but together, they had four chil- he requested no funeral or dren; Mike (Andrea), Marsha viewing. We will be having (TJ), Lisa (Shay), and Julie; graveside services Friday, Feb. with now eight grandchildren, 15, at 2 p.m., at the Tooele Brandon, Xander, Ilauna, City Cemetery. Kenadee, Braxton, Annabelle, Dave is survived by his that donations be made to the FUNERAL HOME & CREMATION CENTER Beau and Avaline. brother, Kent; sister-in- Tooele Food Bank. He graduated from Tooele law Jean; his four children We would like to thank SERVING TOOELE COUNTY & THE WASATCH FRONT SINCE 1979 High School in 1971 where and eight grandchildren. Mountain West Medical Center he was an officer in the FFA. Proceeded in death by his ICU Staff for their compassion He worked for Albertsons for parents, Budd and Lucille; and hard work. They went Serving with Old Fashioned Warmth and Sincerity more than 30 years and helped brother, Bob; and sister-in-law above and beyond throughout in the community tilling gar- André. the last few days of our dad’s 435.884.3031 • 50 W MAIN • GRANTSVILLE dens in the spring. In lieu of flowers we ask life. www.daltonhoopes.com TUESDAY January 29, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A7 MATTERS OF FAITH

In Loving Memory... KRISTI NEWINGHAM The Lord has sent men to preach & DAMIAN Our Loved Ones Are only a tear away the Word to save His people a smile away a dream away a breath away n Saturday, many preach and teach the Word and your sins. This is the preaching a thought away Christians celebrated to administer the Sacraments of the cross. a heartbeat away a very thin veil away the Festival of St. Titus. in accordance with the Gospel. We preach not only Christ a heavenly sign away O Mark Schalmann Titus was a young pastor who He has given the laity the crucified but also Christ resur- GUEST COLUMNIST Our loved ones are always St. Paul took under his wing charge to hear the Word of rected. “It is Christ who died, around us ... with only the and who later became an God and keep it and to receive and furthermore is also risen, greatest essence of all LOVE associate pastor sent by Paul the gifts Christ freely gives in Love and Miss you! who is even at the right hand Love Mom, Dennis, Shawn, Cho, to Corinth and the Island of because they have itching ears, His Means of Grace. of God, who also makes inter- Keshawn, & Keandria Crete. Titus received a letter they will heap up for them- Paul exhorts us to not cession for us” (Rom. 8:34). As of encouragement from Paul, selves teachers; and they will despair, for the Lord of the Christ is risen from the dead, bearing Titus’ name. turn their ears away from the Church has sent men to preach He gives us the assurance that Paul encouraged the young truth, and be turned aside to not only the Law but also the our prayers are heard, for only pastor to be “holding fast the fables …” Gospel. Again, Paul says to Christ has died and risen, and faithful word as he has been Paul knew that a pastor’s Titus, “When the kindness has done so for you, so that taught, that he may be able, hearers will not listen to him, and the love of God our Savior you would have eternal life in by sound doctrine, both to even as many refused to lis- toward man appeared, not by heaven with Him. Your Complete Local News Source exhort and convict those who ten to Christ Himself. Paul is works of righteousness which contradict” (Titus 1:9). This is speaking in the stead and by we have done, but accord- Mark Schlamann is pastor of TOOELETRANSCRIPT Subscribe perhaps the least favorite duty the command of Christ, writ- ing to His mercy He saved us, First Lutheran Church in Tooele. 435-882-0050 of a pastor: to correct the most ing under inspiration of God through the washing of regen- BULLETIN serious errors that exist in a the Holy Spirit. So when Paul eration and renewing of the congregation. speaks here, he is essentially Holy Spirit, whom He poured Paul sent Titus to conse- attaching the words “Thus says out on us abundantly through crate pastors to do just that. the Lord” to his writing. Thus Jesus Christ our Savior, that They were to be stewards of says the Lord, “Speak these having been justified by His God — that is, responsible things, exhort, and rebuke grace we should become heirs for the proper reading and with all authority. Let no one according to the hope of eter- proclamation of the Word and despise you” (Titus 2:15). nal life” [Titus 3:4-7]. the right administration of Paul exhorts Titus and all This is why the Lord sent the Sacraments. Such is the pastors. The fact of the mat- Paul to preach, why the Lord responsibilities of the pas- ter, though, is that pastors are called Titus, and why pastors tor today, for neither God’s despised. Why? We sinners today are sent. The Lord has Word nor His Sacraments resent men who are sent from sent men to preach the Word have changed. Paul writes to God and are faithful to their to save His people both from the young pastor St. Timothy, calls. We want them to be their errors and from their “Guard what was committed “friendly,” as if a pastor cannot sins and to administer His to your trust, avoiding the be friendly and faithful. We Sacraments to bring to you the profane and idle babblings choose to not understand what gifts of forgiveness, life and and contradictions of what is is being taught because we salvation. He has sent under- falsely called knowledge — by don’t like to think we’ve been shepherds to give the gifts, He professing it some have strayed in error. Himself, won on the cross for concerning the faith” (1 Tim. It may well not be our fault, us, paying the debt we could 6:20-21a). for we might have been led not pay. Valentine’s Day Special Paul sent Titus to Crete to into error. But we don’t want Paul shed blood for the sake correct the errors that existed to shun it, and we tend to view of the Gospel, as tradition there and to rebuke those who our shepherds with contempt, states that he was beheaded. persisted in them. He had to thinking he is self-willed and Christ shed blood for Paul’s ON EVERYTHING, INCLUDING ARRANGEMENTS! go there, armed with the Word quick-tempered and not hospi- sake and ours, as Scripture *Must order before February 5. of God, to win the hearts and table, a lover of what is good, tells us that He was crucified. 10% minds of the people. This is just, holy, or self-controlled. This is the message I have been not an easy task. Paul exhorted God has given His undershep- given to proclaim to you: Jesus DISCOUNT Timothy, saying, “They will herds and their hearers each Christ gave His body, shed His Flowers for Sally not endure sound doctrine, but divinely-mandated duties. He blood, and died on the cross SERVING TOOELE COUNTY according to their own desires, has given pastors the charge to for you for the forgiveness of 150 W MAIN • GRANTSVILLE • 435.494.6693 Jenny Wilson to replace McAdams as county mayor ATTENTION

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — election. Ghorbani works become a member of the U.S. FURLOUGHED WORKERS Jenny Wilson has been cho- in communications at the House. sen to take over as Salt Lake and unsuc- Wilson plans to run for a County mayor to replace new cessfully ran for the U.S. House full term in 2020. Her father, We’ve been working on some things to help furloughed workers U.S. Rep. Ben McAdams. She in November. Ted Wilson, was Salt Lake City becomes the first woman to The mayoral post came mayor for nine years in the and have teamed up to negotiate some special pricing that we’re hold the post. open when McAdams unseated 1970s-1980s. passing on. We’ve teamed up with our friends at Kibbles & Cuts The Salt Lake County Republican Mia Love to Democratic Party’s central Stansbury Park to offer these special prices that are well below committee selected Wilson our regular cost on these items, and we’re giving some great sale over Shireen Ghorbani in prices for our regular customers as well. These will be available at the final round of voting on Your Complete Local News Source Saturday in Draper. Rockstar Pets in Tooele as well as Kibbles and Cuts in Stansbury. Wilson is a member of the TOOELE Salt Lake County Council TRANSCRIPT Subscribe who lost her Senate bid to ULLETIN 435-882-0050 Mitt Romney in the midterm B

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We also want to highlight our friends who are stepping up to help. Wasatch Comic Con- A Con For Creators who is giving free VIP passes to their event to furloughed workers. The Nerd Store- who is giving free comic books because entertainment is important and can be expensive

Thank you all for standing by us for the past 10 years. We hope that this can provide some help to you as well. Even though there will be a temporary opening of the government, we are extending our assistance until the end of February A8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY January 29, 2019

started to fill that gap,” said Sales Steve Griffith, broker/owner continued from page A1 at Premier Real Estate Tooele. “As prices went up, some buyers became reluctant. But we’ve had the best fourth sales is not the beginning of a quarter in years.” housing slump, but a normal Griffith said he expects market stabilization as prices home sales will continue to do rose quickly in the last half well in 2019, but maybe just a of 2017 and the first three little slower. quarters of 2018, according to “We’ve been in a seller’s housing officials. market,” Griffith said. “In “We’ve had a shortage of 2019, we’ll see things start to homes, which helped drive even out. Prices will go up, prices up, but by the fourth but not as fast.” quarter new construction Heidi Purvis, president of the Tooele County Association of Realtors and an agent with Frank Wise Choice Real Estate, OHLMAN agreed with Griffith. Attorney at Law “Things slowed down a M little bit,” Purvis said. “We’re still in a seller’s market, but 2019 will be a balancing year Free as we move toward a normal Consultation market.” for Purvis is not concerned Wills & about a bubble burst or crash Trusts looming in the near future. “The things that caused the FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO market crash a few years ago Constructions workers roof a new home in the Saddleback subdivision in Lake Point on Monday afternoon. — bad loans and foreclosures 493 W. 400 N. Tooele — have changed,” she said. Association of Realtors and an “About September, we “It’s not the same environ- agent with Equity Real Estate noticed the markets started 882-4800 ment.” Tooele, also said she noticed slowing down,” Barnes said. Mindy Barnes, past presi- a slow down toward the end “Buyers were a little nervous www.tooelelawoffice.com dent of the Tooele County of 2018. and more new homes came on the market and increased the inventory. It’s not a bubble burst.” According to Barnes, Tooele NOTICE OF ANNUAL SHAREHOLDERS MEETING County remains a strong mar- ket with lower home prices OF THE GRANTSVILLE IRRIGATION COMPANY and plenty of room compared to the Wasatch Front. TO: SHAREHOLDERS OF THE GRANTSVILLE IRRIGATION COMPANY “Our low prices and easy commute make us very competitive,” she said. The Annual Meeting of the Shareholders of Grantsville Irrigation Company will be held on “Our prices are better than WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2019, AT 7:00 P.M. Eagle Mountain or Saratoga Springs. We’re even better at the GRANTSVILLE IRRIGATION COMPANY OFFICES than West Valley City and 411 SO. WEST ST., GRANTSVILLE, UTAH Magna.” for the following purposes: While sales prices may not climb as fast in 2019, Griffith looks forward to another good 1. Elect three (3) members to the Board of Directors year. 2. Presentation of financial report “What we’ve seen is to be 3. President’s remarks expected. It’s just a normal 4. Other Business market correction based on local conditions,” he said. Only shareholders of record as of the 1st day of January, 2019, shall be entitled to vote at the meeting. “Utah’s economy is strong and growing.” If you are unable to attend the meeting, and would like to [email protected] designate a proxy for your votes, you may pick up a Proxy Form at 411 S. West Street any time before the meeting. NEWS TIPS EUGENE MARSHALL 435-882-0050 project received funding. The President TOOELETRANSCRIPT I-80 anonymous public comments BULLETIN continued from page a1 suggested some believed the project should be a priority. “Having the lane from 201 February. go straight past the rest area The auxiliary lane project is and extend the lane to exit 99 included in the Tooele Valley without having to merge into long-range transportation the I80 (sic) lane would elimi- plan, which is receiving public nate a huge bottle neck (sic),” comment until Feb. 13. The said one comment. DENTAL Insurance plan is available as an interac- “Some nights during the tive map online at wfrc.org/ evening commute, automobiles tvlrtp-2019-draft. are stopped to or past the 201 Physicians Mutual Insurance Company The plan can also be on ramp (sic),” said another reviewed at an open house on comment. “Even being in the Jan. 31 at Tooele City Hall in left exit lane is dangerous as the City Council chambers at people are constantly trying A less expensive way to help get 90 N. Main St. from 4:30 to to merge in at a high rate of 6:30 p.m. speed.” the dental care you deserve There were already several “Widening the road is comments on the online ver- exactly what needs to happen sion of the transportation to reduce issues with exit 99,” plan in regard to the proposed said a comment. you can get coverage for about widening of I-80 between [email protected] If you’re over 50, SR-36 and SR-201 before the $1 a day*

Keep your own dentist! You can go to any dentist Medicaid supporters to rally you want as Utah Legislature begins

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — shied away from that option Hours after the Utah Legislature while speaking with reporters No wait for preventive care and no deductibles – opens its 2019 session on last week. you could get a checkup tomorrow Monday, concerned supporters Lawmakers have said a sales of a voter-approved measure tax increase included in the bal- to fully expand Medicaid were lot measure won’t cover the full expected to rally to ask lawmak- cost. Advocates have said it will including ers not to change the law. cover the program for at least Coverage for over 350 procedures – Changes could delay the two years, and any negotiations expected April 1 rollout for about funding could happen cleanings, exams, fi llings, crowns…even dentures months or years, leaving people after the program is rolled out. without health care they have The sales tax increase is counted on, said Stacy Stanford expected to generate $90 million on the cash benefi ts with the Utah Health Policy that will combine with $800 mil- NO annual or lifetime cap Project. lion in federal money. “They’re excited, and they’re Advocates got the issue you can receive desperate,” Stanford said, add- on the ballot after the GOP- ing that the rally could draw dominated legislature refused hundreds of people. to fully expand Medicaid under State leaders have said they President Barack Obama’s signa- plan to implement Medicaid ture health care law, citing cost FREE Information Kit expansion, but want to make concerns. changes so costs do not spiral The plan approved by voters out of control. provides health care coverage 1-855-485-7566 A proposal by Republican to an estimated 150,000 low- Sen. Allen Christensen of North income Utah residents. Ogden would cap enrollment Utah is one of three www.dental50plus.com/265 and include a work requirement, Republican-leaning states where changes requiring a potentially full Medicaid expansion won the lengthy approval process from vote in November after years of the federal government. resistance from state lawmakers. *Individual plan. For expansion supporters, In Idaho, Republican Gov. Product not available in MN, MT, NH, NM, RI, VT, WA. Acceptance guaranteed for one insurance policy/ that would “amount to a repeal,” Brad Little has also voiced the certificate of this type. Contact us for complete details about this insurance solicitation. This specific Stanford said. Another bill possibility of a work requirement offer is not available in CO, NY; call 1-800-969-4781 or respond for similar offer. Certificate C250A (ID: sponsored by Republican Sen. or work training. In Nebraska, C250E; PA: C250Q); Insurance Policy P150 (GA: P150GA; NY: P150NY; OK: P150OK; TN: P150TN) 6096E-0917 MB17-NM008Ec Jake Anderegg would repeal the rollout is on track despite the measure altogether, though some lingering concern from Republican Gov. Gary Herbert lawmakers. TUESDAY January 29, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A9

RDA showed up to request that park would be valued at $1.5 Park the school board renew the billion. continued from page A1 tax incentive agreement for Based on a proposed per- the property and forgo current centage of 80 percent of the property tax revenue for the tax increment, the school dis- new occupants of the Reckitt trict would receive a total of work through the details.” Benckiser building. $26.4 million over a proposed The school board has been “We know that to remain 20-year tax increment period. wary of RDAs and tax incre- competitive we need more At the end of the 20-year peri- ment financing after Allegheny growth,” said School Board od, the school district would Technologies Incorporated, President Maresa Manzione. receive $13.6 million annually which received a tax-incre- “But not in houses. We need in property tax from the busi- ment financed incentive that businesses that will grow our ness park, according to the returned about 90 percent of tax base. We’re just concerned Zions Bank analysis. its property tax, and closed its because in the past we have Without the tax increment, plant in Tooele County just as been burned.” the project won’t happen, the incentive expired. ATI then Susie Becker, with Zions according to Josh Romney, successfully appealed its 2017 Bank Public Finance, presented with the Romney Group. property tax assessment, leav- an analysis of the property’s “This project doesn’t move ing the school district to refund potential growth in taxable without the tax increment approximately $913,000 to the value and what that would financing,” he said. “We don’t company. mean to the school district. have the money for the infra- The school district par- Currently the 900-acres is structure — water, sewer, ticipated in a tax increment classified as green space with power.” funded incentive in 2009 a property value of $14,844, The board voted 5-1 to when Reckitt Benckiser built which brings $24.49 annually approve the agreement to its 600,000-square-foot ware- to the school district or $490 negotiate with the Tooele house on Sheep Lane. over 20 years. County RDA. Julia Holt Two years later, when Becker estimated that at opposed the resolution. Reckitt Benckiser left the coun- build out, at the end of 25 [email protected] ty, the school district started years, the 900-acre business receiving 100 percent of its share of property tax from the building’s owner. Your Complete Local News Source In 2016, at the same meet- TOOELE ing where the school board TRANSCRIPT Subscribe was considering a property tax SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO BULLETIN 435-882-0050 increase, the Tooele County Josh Romney spoke at the Tooele County School District Board of Education meeting Tuesday night.

PET OF THE WEEK

for fi nding all our pets a good STANSBURY HIGH HALFTIME PERFORMANCE home.

PHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE

The Stansbury High competitive dance team (above) performs at For more info. on animals- Adoption Procedure halftime of the Stansbury boys Tooele County Local shelter adoption requires basketball games on Friday Animal Shelter 882-1051 evening. Cheer (left) was in the vaccination payment, licensing air last Friday when mini cheer Tooele City and possible shelter fee. camp participants performed dur- Animal Shelter 882-8900 Shelters are required to ing halftime on Friday when the Grantsville Stansbury boys basketball team hold animals for 5 business took on Park City. Animal Shelter 884-6881 days before euthanization.

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Sundance: A different side of Awkwafina in ‘The Farewell’

PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — was a very real role for me.” it’s likely because her story was Old Grantsville Church Awkwafina’s dramatic turn The title card says the film also featured on an episode of in “The Farewell” has quickly is “based on an actual lie.” The “This American Life.” become one of the must-sees lie would be writer and direc- “The Farewell,” which is at the 2019 Sundance Film tor Lulu Wang’s, who along competing in the U.S. Dramatic Festival. After rising to house- with her family, decided not to Competition of the festival and hold name status last summer tell her grandmother that she’d does not yet have a distribu- with breakout comedic roles been diagnosed with terminal tor, follows this same structure DINNER in “Crazy Rich Asians” and cancer with only three months with Awkwafina playing Billi, “Ocean’s 8,” audiences in Park to live. the stand-in for the director. City, Utah, have been raving “My mother was the one It’s an intimate, emotional and presents over the discovery that she’s who called me and said that often quite funny portrait of got the chops to make you cry, in China, they don’t tell the family, culture-clashes as Billi THEATRE and not just from laughter. patient. They tell the family and her Chinese-American Still, the 30-year-old New members,” Wang said. “I said family venture to mainland York native wasn’t entirely sure immediately, ‘I have to go China to put on a real fake she could even pull it off. back. I have to see her right wedding and try to say good- February “I didn’t think that I would away.’ And she’s like, ‘Well, bye without ever letting on be able to cry. I just didn’t slow down. Actually, because that that’s what they’re doing. 7,8,9,11 think that I would ever be you can’t tell her if you go Awkwafina said the film able to harness that. But with back. If you’re too emotional, also captures the “struggle of this movie, I would cry like that will give it away.”’ going back to China.” even when we were blocking So Wang’s father con- “It’s hard to describe. a scene,” she said. “I guess structed a plan to have her Because you’re made to feel Samuel French, Inc. I discovered a whole other only cousin get married in two like you’re not American in side of something that I never weeks, which would provide America. But you go to China knew existed. But it all really a reasonable excuse for the and ... you’re a stranger there stemmed from thinking about whole family to travel to China as well,” Awkwafina said. “It my grandma. That’s really to see her grandmother one really hit that on the head.” what it was. So it’s very real. It last time. If it sounds familiar Dinner Theatre Information Show Only Info Fri Feb 8, Ultimate Catering Taco Bar $20 Thurs Feb 7 at 7pm Sat, Feb 9, Dickey’s BBQ Chopped Brisket $20 Mon Feb 11 at 7pm Doors open one half hour DINNER THEATRE SEATS MUST BE RESERVED IN ADVANCE! before show starts Dinner Theatre doors open at 6pm. Eat dinner when you arrive. Adults 13+ $10, Dinner Theatre Show starts at 7pm. Concessions also available. Seniors 60+ $8 Reserve tickets (pay at the door) call/text (435) 241-8131 Kids 4-12 $7, 3 & Under Free A Full-Color Learning and Buy tickets online: www.oldgrantsvillechurch.com or... Concessions available. Seating in order of Reservation/Ticket Activity Page Just for Kids! purchase. Please let us know if you have a disability we need to accommodate. Every Thursday in Your Tooele Transcript-Bulletin Old Grantsville Church A10 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY January 29, 2019 Sports

SPORTS WRAP Grantsville girls basketball Grantsville boys finish vs. South Summit After trailing 22-20 at halftime, the Grantsville girls basketball team pulled away for a 49-35 win over South Summit in a second in region meet Region 13 game Thursday night in Kamas. Hannah Butler had 14 points and 10 rebounds to Cowboys’ Thomas wins two individual titles; Begay leads girls lead the Cowboys (15-3, 5-0 DARREN VAUGHAN Seth Smurthwaite and Ethan Region 13), while Maison White SPORTS EDITOR GHS SWIMMING Smurthwaite kicked off the had 10 points and Madison The Grantsville swimming meet with a victory in the boys’ Fields added nine points and program can no longer fly to the exploits of Zane Thomas 200-yard medley relay, clocking six rebounds. Grantsville will under the radar — especially and Ethan, Seth and Ben in at 1 minute, 53.52 seconds play host to Morgan in a region not after the show the boys Smurthwaite. Those four com- — just .57 seconds slower than game Thursday. team put on Thursday at the bined to win three individual their fastest time of the season, Tooele girls basketball Region 13 championships in titles and two relays, setting set during a November meet FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO vs. Ogden Kamas. the stage for what should be against Tooele. Thomas, who Grantsville’s Zane Thomas celebrates after winning the boys’ 100-yard back- The Cowboys finished second an exciting Class 3A state swim - Ogden outscored Tooele won every event he entered, fol stroke title at the Region 13 championship swim meet Thursday in Kamas. 15-8 in the second and third at the region meet behind only meet Feb. 7 in Provo. Thomas’ winning time of 59.55 seconds is the second-fastest in Class 3A quarters and held off a fourth- North Summit, thanks largely Thomas, Ben Smurthwaite, SEE GHS PAGE A11 ➤ this season. quarter rally to defeat the Buffaloes 34-31 in a Region 11 girls basketball game Thursday night at Tooele High School. Makayla Komer led the Buffs Tooele Co. (8-7, 3-3 Region 11) with 11 points, while freshman Alivia Comeback kids do it again Cluff added eight. Tooele faced trio wins Juan Diego in a region road game that was not complete at Stallions move press time Tuesday night. at region Stansbury girls basketball to 4-2 in region vs. Park City The Stansbury girls shut out swim meet Park City in the first quarter with victory over and led 27-6 at halftime as the THS girls finish second, Stallions rolled to a 58-24 win visiting Park City over the Miners in a Region 11 basketball game at Stansbury DARREN VAUGHAN Stansbury boys third High School on Friday night. SPORTS EDITOR DARREN VAUGHAN Kalee Philips led Stansbury The Stansbury boys basket- SPORTS EDITOR (8-8, 5-1 Region 11) with 15 ball team certainly has a flair With plenty of stars hav- points, while Mia Thurber had for the dramatic. ing descended upon Park City 13 points and five rebounds for the annual Sundance Film and Kenzi Knudsen had nine Festival, it was three Tooele points, four rebounds and five SHS BASKETBALL County swimmers who shined assists. The Stallions traveled brightest during Saturday’s to Washington Terrace to face For the third game in a row, Region 11 championship meet Bonneville in a region game the Stallions found themselves at the Park City Aquatic Center. that was not complete at press trailing in the second half on time Tuesday. Friday night, seemingly on THS SWIMMING Wendover girls basketball the brink of letting things get vs. Tintic out of hand. But, for the third A 16-6 first-quarter run helped game in a row, Stansbury SHS SWIMMING propel the Wendover girls came back — this time rally- basketball team to a 61-48 ing from seven points down Stansbury’s Kally Morris and win over Tintic in a Region late in the third quarter to Destin Kunz and Tooele’s Cade 21 home game Friday night. upend Park City 60-52 in a McEachern can call themselves Leslie Luna led four Wildcats in crucial Region 11 home game region champions after stellar double-figures with 15 points, that pulled the Stallions into a performances that clinched including three 3-pointers. three-way tie for second place their spots in the Class 4A state Tanya Duran also hit three in the league standings. championships, which will take 3-pointers and scored 11 “We don’t give up and we place Feb. 8-9. Morris made points, while Alana Henderson can fight through anything perhaps the biggest impression, had a double-double with 10 as long as we’re willing to do setting personal season-best points and 11 rebounds and the work,” said junior Jaden times in winning the girls’ 200- Adriana Delgadillo added 10 Jenkins, who had 11 points, yard individual medley in 2 points. Wendover (12-4, 3-1 seven assists and five steals for minutes, 19.56 seconds and the Region 21) played host to West the Stallions (7-9, 4-2 Region 100 butterfly in 1:02.08. Her Ridge Academy in a region 11). “We would like to just 200 IM time ranks 12th in Class game that was not complete at start ahead and get ahead, but 4A this season, while her effort press time Tuesday. we’re obviously going to be in the 100 fly was the eighth- Dugway girls basketball happy if we come back from a fastest in the classification. at Milford hard fight and win.” Morris wasn’t the only Dugway’s Region 21 road Park City (5-10, 2-4) female swimmer from Tooele game against Milford was led 43-36 with 1:35 left in County who stood out, however. called in the third quarter with the third quarter, and was Tooele’s Aspen Grgich clinched the visiting Mustangs trailing up 49-43 after a layup by FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO a state berth in the 100 free- 54-5. Paisley Smith had all of Nathaniel Lowe with four Stansbury’s Jacob Spaulding (25) goes up for a shot as Park City’s Jacob Farnsworth tries to draw a charge during style, finishing second with a Dugway’s points in the loss. and a half minutes left in the the second half of Friday’s Region 11 game at Stansbury High School. Spaulding scored 12 points in the Stallions’ season-best time of 57.06 after The Mustangs (0-9, 0-2 Region game. But the Miners hit just 60-52 win over the Miners. finishing fourth in the 200 free 21) traveled to Eureka for a one more field goal the rest (2:07.28). Her THS teammate, region game against Tintic that of the way while the Stallions low for a tough basket after a ties.” 3-for-11 from 3-point range. Myra Miller, also punched her was not complete at press went on a 17-3 run. pass from Jenkins. After Park After a McCurdy free throw However, the Stallions’ role ticket to the state meet with time Tuesday. “I credit a really hard pre- City’s Mark McCurdy put the cut the Stallions’ lead to one players stepped up big when a season-best time in the 100 Tooele boys basketball season, where you play all Miners back in front 51-49, point, Thevenot delivered a they had to, as Tia and Jacob breaststroke, finishing second vs. Ogden those tough teams and you Thevenot tied the game again dagger in transition, drilling a Spaulding each finished with in the region with a time of Josh Wilkins had 28 points just have to gut it out — it’s on the Stallions’ next trip 3-pointer from the right wing 12 points. Tanner Mears had 1:13.36 to go with a fourth- and Justin Rogers added 21 paying dividends here in down the floor, and after a off a feed from Jenkins to put four points and Jet Richins place finish in the 50 free (sea- as Tooele rolled to a 78-63 region,” Stansbury coach Joe defensive stop, Jenkins found SHS up 56-52 with 1:11 left. and David Spaulding each son-best 26.70). win over Ogden in a Region White said. “They have a lot Pae Tia for a layup that put Stansbury went 4-for-6 from had two. White noted that Tooele’s Sharon Seals 11 boys basketball game of heart and they’re finding Stansbury in front to stay. the free-throw line in the final Richins came up with a crucial was fourth in the 500 free Friday night at Tooele High ways to win. People are step- “I have faith in my team- minute to put the game away. defensive rebound late in the (6:03.13) and fifth in the 200 School. Nathan Swan added 10 ping up.” mates,” Jenkins said. “I get Thevenot finished with 17 game and David Spaulding, a free (2:13.32). Annalee Beard points for the Buffaloes (10-8, Stansbury’s Peyton to know them not just on the points to lead the Stallions reserve who normally doesn’t finished fourth in the 100 back- 4-2 Region 11) and Canyon Thevenot tied the game at court, but also off the court, despite a rough shooting see much varsity playing time, stroke (season-best 1:07.14) Christensen had five points, 49-49 with three minutes left, so I learn to trust them and night in which he went 5-for- nine rebounds, five assists fighting through contact down give up my own opportuni- 14 from the field, including SEE STALLIONS PAGE A12 ➤ SEE SWIMMING PAGE A11 ➤ and 12 steals. Tooele faced Juan Diego on Tuesday night in Draper in a region game that was not complete at press time. Killian’s last-second bucket Wendover boys basketball vs. Tintic Wendover scored 53 points in the first half and held on lifts Cowboys over Wildcats for an 88-71 win over Tintic in a Region 21 boys basketball forward Ammon Bartley hit a game Friday night at Wendover Cowboys use 19-3 run GHS BASKETBALL close shot to make it 10-2 with High School. Brayan Mendoza in second half to rally 4:10 left in the first quarter. led the Wildcats (13-2, 4-0 Grantsville’s final five minutes, as South “We don’t quit. We’re in it Region 21) with 27 points, Jackson Summit went on a 7-2 run for the long haul,” Grantsville while Pedro Alvarez had 25 Sandberg drives past South Summit before Killian’s heroics. associate head coach Brandon points with five 3-pointers and to the basket TAVIN STUCKI With about five minutes Pehrson said. “It was frustrat- Jaime Montalvo added 22 during a home GRANTSVILLE BASKETBALL left, Killian scored through ing in the first quarter. I knew points. Wendover will play host game against With 7.7 seconds left, another foul to give Grantsville the defense had to step up. It’s to West Ridge Academy in a Morgan ear- Grantsville freshman Carter its largest lead of the night at frustrating when you’re down region game Wednesday night. lier this month. Killian received the inbounds 35-31-capping off a 19-3 run like that so quick.” Sandberg and pass, went baseline to baseline that lasted more than 13 min- Then in the second half, Dugway boys basketball the Cowboys ral- at Milford lied from a 16-3 and scored through contact to utes in the second half. South Summit’s Logan Davis A 25-5 second-quarter run first-quarter give the Cowboys a 39-38 win As good as the Cowboys scored on a cut to the hoop doomed the Dugway boys bas- deficit to stun over South Summit on Friday. were defensively in the sec- that made it 30-17 with 6:54 ketball team in its 63-28 loss South Summit “I just had the ball in my ond half, they were as bad to go in the third quarter. It to Milford in a Region 21 road 39-38 on Friday hands at the right time,” Killian offensively in the first quar- was the last time a Wildcat game Friday night. T.J. Ramos night for their said. “To be honest, I don’t ter — South Summit limited player scored until guard Gabe second Region led the Mustangs with 10 really know what happened — Grantsville to three points and Harry hit from range to make 13 win of the points in the loss. I just played basketball.” jogged out to a 16-3 lead after it 35-34 with 2:18 to go, spark- season. The coast-to-coast game the first eight minutes. The ing the late rally that nearly SEE WRAP PAGE A12 ➤ FRANCIE winner was the only field goal Cowboys didn’t score for nearly AUFDEMORTE/ the Cowboys earned in the three minutes until senior SEE COWBOYS PAGE A12 ➤ TTB PHOTO TUESDAY January 29, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A11 Join the Club!

Stallions stampede past Jaguars Tooele Club Tooele 438 W 400 N Annual 40 seconds left in the first peri- tech-fall win over Ryan Allred Teen Center Membership Stansbury records SHS WRESTLING od at 113 pounds; and Danny with 22 seconds left in the Boys & Girls 102 N 7th St. Khoundet pinned Levi Ashurst- second period at 182 pounds. Club Tooele, UT 84074 $10$ nine pins to win featured nine victories by pin. In McGee 1:50 into the 138-pound Jordan Hammond had the only 435.843.5719 fact, only three of the 12 match- match. match that went the full six min- es reached the third period, and Gideon Gavin pinned Dalton utes, earning a 15-4 major deci- Homework Help | Computers | Games | Arts | and More! dual over W. Jordan five matches ended in the first Dammaschke with 54 seconds sion over Mason Glad at 126. DARREN VAUGHAN two minutes. left in the second period at Ethan Vorwaller (170) and SPORTS EDITOR Owen Gull had the fastest 160 pounds and Braden Judd Carson Pease (106) won by for- Afterschoolol One night after essentially pin of the evening, taking down finished his 152-pound match feit, while Seth Kanirie lost by wrapping up the Region 11 West Jordan’s Jonathan Carter against Jackson Buehner 16 sec- tech fall to Jeff Rogers at 120. programs foforr championship, the Stansbury Denos just 48 seconds into onds before the second-period Stansbury will wrap up its Youth andd Teens wrestling team was back in their 132-pound match. Kaden buzzer. Heavyweight Braxton regular season with a pair of action Thursday at home against Shin’s 195-pound match against Ard pinned Zachary Goodale home dual meets this week, fac- When School ages 6 - 18.8. is West Jordan in a non-region Carson Pugh lasted 1:04. with 20 seconds left in regula- ing Salem Hills on Wednesday The Club dual. Braydon Allie beat Nathan tion and 220-pounder Carsen before finishing the Region 11 is In! Out The Stallions had little trou- Coburn at the 1:12 mark of the Cooper pinned Onesi Ngalo schedule against Ben Lomond ble with the visiting Jaguars, 145-pound match; Brayden with 18 seconds left. and Ogden on Thursday. TooeleClub.org rolling to a 75-5 victory that Phillips beat Caleb Denos with Walker Beck earned a 17-2 [email protected]

BUFFS WIN AGAIN

Tooele’s Nathan Swan (left) looks to make a pass during Friday’s Region 11 home game against Ogden. Swan had 10 points in the Buffaloes’ 78-63 win over the Tigers as Tooele improved to 4-2 in region play. FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

GHS continued from page A10 lowed with a victory in the 200 individual medley, recording a season-best time of 2:13.40 that ranks third in Class 3A this season. Seth Smurthwate (2:16.63) and Ben Smurthwaite (2:21.38) were second and fourth, respectively. FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Then came the most exciting Ethan (left) and Seth Smurthwaite go head-to-head in the boys’ 100-yard finish of the meet, with Ethan butterfly at the Region 13 championship swim meet on Thursday in Kamas. and Seth Smurthwaite separat- Ethan beat Seth by .02 seconds, finishing the race with a time of 59.56. ed by the blink of an eye in the 100 butterfly. Ethan led Seth Jarrett Randall finished eighth enth in the 200 IM (season- by .19 seconds after the first 50 in the 100 fly (1:10.33). The best 2:52.21) and Stephanie yards, but Seth came roaring Cowboys’ 200 free relay team Jordan was eighth in the 100 back before Ethan out-touched of Garrett Hogge-Warburton, back (1:20.49). Grantsville had him by .02 seconds — 59.56 Randall, Evan Thomas and a pair of sixth-place relay finish- to 59.58. Ethan’s winning time Hall finished sixth in 1:48.61. es as well, with Jordan, Kylee was his best of the season and Grantsville’s girls finished Haycock, Higley and Reagan ranks him sixth in 3A. sixth in the meet, just behind Hunter finishing the 200 Thomas and Ethan Summit Academy and well medley relay in 2:20.66 and Smurthwaite went 1-2 in the ahead of seventh-place South Hunter, Arianna McKendrick, 100 backstroke, with Thomas’ Summit as Rowland Hall rolled Jordan and Begay clocking in at winning time of 59.55 putting to the team title. Hadlee Begay 4:44.81 in the 400 free relay. him second in 3A behind only won both of her events with The top two region finish- Emery’s Keldan Guymon. Ethan relative ease, recording the ers in each individual event BANNERS finished in 1:04.37. fastest time in 3A this season in and the first-place relays auto- The Smurthwaites and the 200 free (2:02.14) and win- matically qualify for the state Thomas joined forces again for ning by 11.06 seconds. She also meet, scheduled for Feb. 7 on Yard Signs, Vehicle Magnets, a victory in the 400 freestyle won the 500 free in 5:30.40, the Brigham Young University relay at the end of the meet, 36.6 seconds ahead of her campus. The rest of the field for finishing in 3:38.43. nearest competitor but more the state meet will be set based Window Stickers, and More! Ben Smurthwaite finished than eight seconds off her own on the fastest times from meets third in the 500 free in 6:13.24, 3A-leading time of 5:22.06, set throughout the season, with 24 while Justin Hall was fourth at the Tooele Invitational in competitors in each individual in the 200 free (2:15.90) and December. event and 16 relay teams. eighth in the 100 free (59.57). Anika Higley finished sev- [email protected]

Kunz clocked in at 2:10.56 ished third in the 400 free relay, Swimming to win the 200 IM. Tooele’s as Andrew Crane, Stoddard, continued from page A10 Sho Ikeda finished third in Woods and McEachern finished the 200 IM (2:12.58) and 100 in 3:44.76. for Tooele, while Stansbury’s fly (57.27), while Brayden Adair, Reynolds, Jefferies Caroline Wilson was fourth Davis was third in the 500 free and Kunz led Stansbury to in the 100 breast (season-best (5:34.00) and fourth in the 200 a second-place finish in the 1:14.67) and seventh in the 100 free (1:58.76). 400 free relay (3:43.69) and free (1:00.39). Tooele’s Addy Stansbury’s Isaac Adair fourth place in the 200 free Seal was sixth in the 100 fly finished fourth in the 100 fly relay (1:41.79). Ethan Tashro, (1:14.32) and seventh in the (1:03.14) and eighth in the Eldredge, Sergio Reyescordova 200 IM (2:42.69). 200 IM (2:28.62). Harrison and Wyatt McLachlan finished Tooele’s 400-yard freestyle Stoddard finished fifth in the seventh in the 200 medley relay relay team of Grgich, Beard, 100 free (55.49) for Tooele, for Stansbury with a time of Miller and Seals finished sec- while Stansbury’s Chase 2:04.48. ond with a season-best time Eldredge was fifth in the Stansbury finished third with of 3:58.45. Stansbury finished 500 free (5:58.81) and Kyler 265 points, behind first-place High Quality • Full Color fifth in the race, with Wilson, Maier was sixth in the 100 Juan Diego (392) and runner- Taylor Gillis, Trixia Fisher and fly (1:07.24) and seventh in up Park City (281.5). Bonneville Morris recording a season-best the 200 IM (2:27.00). Xavier was fourth with 257.5 points 4:12.05. Beard, Miller, Grgich Jefferies was sixth in the 100 and Tooele was fifth with 252. Custom Design & 24 Hour and Seals also brought home a back (1:05.76) and tied for The top two region finishers third-place finish for Tooele in eighth in the 50 free (26.09) in each individual event auto- the 200 medley relay (2:01.43). and Joshua Reynolds was sixth matically qualify for the state Turnaround Available Fisher, Wilson, Gillis and Morris in the 100 breast (1:15.79) for meet, along with the winner finished fourth in the 200 free Stansbury. Tooele’s Cooper of each relay. The remainder relay for Stansbury (1:53.27), Woods finished seventh in the of the state meet field will be with Beard, Kylee Randle, Seal 200 free (2:13.13). determined by the fastest times and Aspen Walker finishing McEachern, Stoddard, Ikeda from throughout the season, TOOELE seventh for Tooele (1:58.51). and Davis earned a second- with 24 competitors in each TRANSCRIPT Tooele’s girls finished sec- place finish for Tooele in the individual event and 16 teams ond as Park City ran away with 200 medley relay, recording in each relay. The preliminary the team title. Stansbury was a time of 1:50.53, while the heats for the Class 4A state BULLETIN fourth, just two points behind same foursome — with Davis meet will take place Feb. 8 on third-place Juan Diego. and Ikeda switching places — the Brigham Young University McEachern recorded a sea- finished third in the 200 free campus in Provo, with the finals son-best time of 58.09 to win relay with a season-best time the next day. the boys’ 100 back title, while of 1:38.44. The Buffs also fin- [email protected] 58 North Main St. 435-882-0050 TOOELE A12 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY January 29, 2019 Tooele falls to Farmington in finale LIISA MECHAM respective opponents, Austin CORRESPONDENT “We need to build confidence, Gillette and Darion Wesche. In its final regular sea- “In practice all week we son dual, the Tooele wres- so the boys can accomplish what talked about scoring first tling team fell 56-20 to and that whoever scores first the Farmington Phoenix at they want to do in their matches.” usually wins,” Tooele coach Farmington. Cody Valdez said. “In all 13 — Cody Valdez, Tooele wrestling coach matches tonight, the person THS WRESTLING who scored first won. against Zach Pace to increase to earn another victory in the “With divisionals coming Although the Buffaloes the lead to 14-0. match and gave up the next up next week, we are going started the dual off strongly, At 182, Cameron Simko 38 points to the Phoenix. to be working on being more they were unable to maintain fell to Farmington’s lone Parker Hansen (106) lost 5-2 confident on our feet,” he their lead and fell behind as senior, Cam Barnson, in to Tyler Nuttall, and Wyatt added. “We need to build they moved from the heavier 1:21. After a Tooele for- Labrum was pinned at 113 confidence, so the boys can weights to the lighter wres- feit at 195, the Buffs’ lead by Max Peterson. Tooele’s accomplish what they want tlers. shrank to two, 14-12. In Ethan Hunter (120) lost by to do in their matches. We Senior Eli Messick (152 the 220-pound matchup, tech fall, 17-2, to Sam May. need to be mentally tough pounds) opened the dual Maison Teeples was pinned Gabe Vigil (126) fought and wrestle through the with an exciting 13-4 major late in the third period by for two periods before giv- matches to succeed at divi- decision over Sam Jenkins. Farmington’s Naki Itaaehau, ing up the pin at the buzzer sionals.” Adelicio Mascarenas, a 160- but Hunter Jensen (285) against Ethan Merck, and The Buffs will host the pound junior, also claimed quickly got the pin over Cannon Manning (132) Class 4A Division A tourna- his match with a 14-5 major Farmington’s Ryo Kano in lost by pin to Kayden Hyde ment Feb. 8-9. The top eight decision over Trey Pace to 1:01. (5:21). In the final two wrestlers in each weight will give the Buffs an 8-0 lead. Heading into the light matches, Julian Gomez advance to the Class 4A state Ryan Hintze (170) added to weights, the Buffs held a slim (138) and Wyatt Evans tournament at Utah Valley the lead with a pin at 5:19 20-18 lead but were unable (145) were pinned by their University on Feb. 15-16. Complete Follow us on FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Stansbury’s Jaden Jenkins pushes the ball up the court during Friday’s Local Sports Region 11 boys basketball game against Park City at Stansbury High Facebook! School. Jenkins had 11 points, seven assists and five steals in the Stallions’ In Every Issue 60-52 win over the Miners. TOOELE However, White wasn’t TRANSCRIPT TOOELE Stallions TRANSCRIPT about to get comfortable with continued from page A10 BULLETIN BULLETIN his team’s playoff position just yet — particularly with how stepped in for senior Kale close the Stallions came to los- Vorwaller, whose playing time ing to Park City on the heels of was limited by an illness. their two come-from-behind Lowe led Park City with 18 wins against Tooele and Ben points and Alex Obradovich Lomond. READY TO BUILD! added 10. It was a particularly “Every game’s huge now,” tough loss for the Miners, who White said. “We’ll go have fun, fell two games behind Tooele, Hurry! Only 6 Lake Lots Left! Bonneville and Stansbury for go play hard and see what hap- a postseason berth with six pens.” games remaining in the region Following Tuesday night’s season. All four teams ahead road game at Bonneville, of Park City in the standings, which was not complete at including first-place Juan press time, the Stallions will Diego, currently own the head- return home to face Ogden on to-head tiebreaker against the Friday night. Miners. [email protected]

Cowboys Jared Dansie missed the front end of a one-and-one situation continued from page A10 that could have given South Summit a three-point lead in Stansbury Park gave South Summit the win. with 9.5 seconds left. The Pier The Cowboys limited South Killian finished with a team- Summit to 10 points in the sec- high six points, as did senior ond half. guard Seth Beckett and junior Lot 201 Lot 202 Lot 203 Lot 204 Lot 205 Lot 206 Lot 207 Lot 208 Lot 209 Lot 210 Lot 211 Lot 212 Lot 213 Lot 214 Lot 215 Lot 216 Lot 217 Lot 218 Lot 219 Lot 220 It was the second time in forward Kayden Bohman. as many games the Cowboys South Summit guard Jake came back to win after being Rydalch had a game-high 11 Pier Place down by double digits. points, eight of which were Lot 111 Lot 112 Lot 113 Lot 114 Lot 115 Lot 116 Lot 117 Lot 101 Lot 102 Lot 103 Lot 104 Lot 105 Lot 106 Lot 107 Lot 108 Lot 109 Lot 110 Grantsville head coach scored in the first quarter on Bryan Detweiler said he was corner shots behind or near the pleased with the way his play- ers were flying around on 3-point line. Lot 118 defense during the second half. The Cowboys improved to “Last week I thought we 2-3 in region play and will played our best basketball of next face Morgan on the road the season,” Detweiler said. Friday. “We’re real dangerous right Tavin Stucki has covered prep now.” sports in Utah for more than Enjoy pleasant family evenings South Summit went 2-of-5 10 years. This story was not from the free-throw line in the subject to the approval of the on your own beach at Stansbury fourth quarter. Wildcat guard Grantsville basketball program. Park’s own wakeboard lake! • Beautiful Gated Community Manti 82, Grand 68 • Only 30 minutes from Salt Lake City Wrap San Juan 85, North Sanpete 69 continued from page A10 Notable HS girls basketball • Community Beach with a Children’s Play Park scores • Boatless Wakeboard System Dugway boys basketball Thursday at Escalante Grantsville 49, South Summit 35 • Aqua Park Playground all photos are only representations. The Dugway boys basketball team Ogden 34, Tooele 31 wrapped up a two-game southern Cedar 73, Dixie 44 Utah road trip with a 47-44 loss to Escalante in a non-region game Desert Hills 46, Hurricane 44 Saturday. T.J. Ramos had 10 points Snow Canyon 48, Canyon View 40 and Tyi Bear and Jacob Hoskins Ridgeline 76, Green Canyon 66 each had eight for the Mustangs Sky View 45, Mountain Crest 32 (4-8, 1-2 Region 21). Dugway will ALA 53, Maeser Prep 48, OT face Tintic in a Region 21 road Carbon 39, Providence Hall 20 game Wednesday in Eureka. Emery 69, Richfield 51 Notable HS boys basketball Friday scores Wendover 61, Tintic 48 Friday Milford 54, Dugway 5 Wendover 88, Tintic 71 Stansbury 58, Park City 24 Milford 63, Dugway 28 Payson 38, Orem 36 Grantsville 39, South Summit 38 Choose From Many Different Floorplans & Lots on or off the Lake Salem Hills 68, Spanish Fork 60 Tooele 78, Ogden 63 Uintah 57, Mountain View 45 Stansbury 60, Park City 52 Juan Diego 52, Bonneville 37 • Upgrades are our standard Dixie 66, Cedar 47 Union 56, Delta 52, OT Hurricane 58, Desert Hills 44 Grand 42, North Sanpete 33 • Custom Home Builder Snow Canyon 68, Canyon View 59 San Juan 77, Manti 36 Mountain View 54, Uintah 40 Saturday • Your plan or ours Orem 84, Payson 70 Grand 50, Manti 48 Salem Hills 69, Spanish Fork 63 San Juan 50, North Sanpete 34 • We can design your perfect home Juan Diego 51, Bonneville 25 Bear River 60, Ridgeline 54 Schedule Wednesday’s games • .40 Acre Lots Green Canyon 81, Mtn. Crest 66 Wendover boys basketball vs. Logan 77, Sky View 75 West Ridge Academy, 6 p.m. • Building Homes for over 30 Years Morgan 56, Summit Academy 37 $ Stansbury wrestling Starting in the 400’s Delta 71, Union 27 vs. Salem Hills, 7 p.m. Maeser Prep 69, ALA 59 Dugway boys basketball at Tintic, Providence Hall 58, Carbon 40 7 p.m. Laramie Dunn & Lisa Neil Grand 81, North Sanpete 54 Thursday’s games Realtypath 2014 & 2015 top producers in Utah & 2016 top producing agent for the Tooele County Association of Realtors Manti 77, San Juan 73 Stansbury wrestling vs. Ogden Richfield 65, Emery 60 and Ben Lomond, 4:30 p.m. Laramie 435-224-4000 Judge Memorial 76, Tooele girls basketball American Heritage 63 vs. Bonneville, 7 p.m. Lisa 435-849-6130 Saturday Grantsville girls basketball Escalante 47, Dugway 44 vs. Morgan, 7 p.m. TUESDAY January 29, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN B1 Hometown

Brian Baldwin works the counter at Sondra’s Silver Sage Cafe and convenience store. Brian and his wife Jenny Baldwin bought the Vernon business nearly five years ago.

Sondra’sSTORY MARK WATSON | PHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE Silver Sage Popular café and convenience store in Vernon is the place for food, fuel — and a side of live music before heading out to the West Desert

ondra’s Silver Sage cafe/convenience store in Vernon is a unique stop for travelers along state Route 36 in Ssoutheastern Tooele County. “I live in Tooele and every chance I get, I go the back way to get to Nephi and then on to Moroni,” said truck driver Steve Ball. “If I’m not on a time limit, I’ll call my order in from Tooele, and when I get to Sondra’s, they have a nice meal ready for me.” Sondra’s Silver Sage is located about 30 miles south of Tooele on SR-36. Brian and Jenny Baldwin of Murray purchased the business 4 and a half years ago from Tooele County Recorder Jerry Houghton. The new owners named the business Sondra’s Silver Sage after Jenny Baldwin’s grandmother Sondra Rigby, who lived in Vernon. “I drove my Harley out here about seven times trying to talk myself out of it,” Brian Baldwin said. After running the business part-time for nearly 4 years, he now works

SEE SONDRA’S PAGE B8 ➤

Brian and Jenny Baldwin (above) with their children Farrah, Cozette, Eden and Van. Sondra’s Silver Sage (right) offers food, fuel and a variety of goods to Vernon residents and visitors. The next closest services are more than 30 miles away.

Aillen Calegio and Cozette Baldwin sing karaoke at Sondra’s Silver Sage. B2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY January 29, 2019

box with a string handle, was first marketed in 1902? 5. GAMES: In what game is by Fifi Rodriguez a shuttlecock used? 6. SPACE: Who piloted 1. MOVIES: Which 1969 America’s first and short- movie featured the song est flight into space? “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on 7. ANIMAL KINGDOM: My Head”? Which fish is the fastest in 2. LITERATURE: What is the world? the name of Harry’s owl 8. GEOGRAPHY: What is in the “Harry Potter” book Saigon’s current name in series? Vietnam? 3. MUSIC: Which American 9. ART: Which city is home Moments actor performs music to the statue “David” cre- as his alter ego Childish ated by Michelangelo? Gambino? 10. MONEY: What was the in Time 4. FOOD & DRINK: Which basic currency of Greece kids’ snack, contained in a before the euro? The History Channel ➤ On Feb. 13, 1861, the earliest military action to be revered with a Medal Mega Maze of Honor award is per- formed by Col. Bernard J.D. Irwin, an Army surgeon serving in the first major U.S.-Apache conflict. The Irish-born doctor volunteered to go to the rescue of 2nd Lt. George Bascom, who was trapped in Arizona with 60 soldiers by the Apaches. ➤ On Feb. 14, 1886, the first trainload of oranges grown by southern California farmers leaves ALL PUZZLE ANSWERS BELOW Los Angeles via the transcontinental rail- road. Development of California surged when state railroad lines linked Los Angeles into the transcontinental railways. t first, the long rock- A: In 2014, we wrote ➤ On Feb. 15, 1903, the ing settee with a about an aqua Lafayette fruit first Teddy bear goes on Astrange fence protect- jar sold at a Norman Heckler sale. Toy-store owner and ing half the seat seems odd. bottle auction for $4,950. inventor Morris Michtom Why place a fence on an You made a very common placed two stuffed bears elaborately decorated settee error. “Almost” is not good in his shop window, that looks as if it belongs in enough when pricing some advertising them as a living room? The settee is things, especially bottles. a furniture form that dates Color is important, and so is Teddy bears, named to the 1810s. It seems to be the wording, size, and its top. after President Theodore a lengthened Windsor or Clear jars are common; col- Roosevelt. Hitchcock chair, all wood ors are rare. Lafayette quarts ➤ On Feb. 16, 1923, in with spindles, curved arms are worth far less than the Thebes, Egypt, English and stretchers. Some look rare pints. There are about archaeologist Howard as if the rockers had been 14 versions of Lafayette Carter enters the sealed added. But paintings and ads bottles, and each has its own burial chamber of the explain the use and furniture price range. There are also ancient Egyptian ruler historians call it a “settee- several types of tops. Your King Tutankhamen. cradle.” The baby’s caretaker bottle is a clear quart. The The room was virtually or nurse sat on the bench $4,950 bottle is an aqua pint. Fat Cat, Thin Cat with the baby lying on a pil- Clear quarts retail for $100 intact, with its treasures low on the seat, safe because to $250. untouched after more hides when anyone comes to cess. The only drawback is that the rails kept the infant from Try going to bottle shows than 3,000 years. visit. The trouble is, Comet her cat now insists that she sit rolling off. It was decorated or bottle auctions in person ➤ On Feb. 12, 1938, Judy is not gaining weight. I think next to him and pet him while to be seen in an important or view them online to see Blume, popular young- Star is stealing his food, but he’s eating! place in the house, probably values. Talk to some collec- adult author, is born in Comet won’t eat unless Star I’d be remiss if I didn’t also near the fireplace to keep tors. And remember, an auc- Elizabeth, New Jersey. is eating next to him. Any suggest that you take Comet to warm in the winter. Some of tion charges the seller a fee, Blume’s books, which suggestions? — Worried Cat the vet for a checkup, just to the pieces had a long fence often as much as 25 percent, realistically address Mama in Oak Park, Illinois make sure that he doesn’t have that left little room for the and you have other costs like such topics as bullying, any underlying health issues adult caretaker. A rocking shipping and packing the divorce, friendships and DEAR CAT MAMA: It can be that could be preventing him settee-bench with a faux bottle and taxes. We identify family, gained legions tough to change a cat’s eating from gaining weight. The vet maple paint decoration and the source of the pictures in of young fans; however, DEAR PAW’S CORNER: I habits. Still, give it a try. Feed also may suggest a different a plank seat sold at a Neal our price guide and anything have two cats — one very Comet as usual, next to Star, food for Comet in the short Auction recently for $976. else we write, and list the their content frequently fat, and the other way too but observe them closely to see term to make sure he’s getting Some of the benches have addresses of major auction led them to be banned by thin. “Star,” my fat cat, if your bigger cat is indeed tak- plenty of nutrients. brought close to $2,000. houses at the end of our school libraries. was adopted a year before ing Comet’s food. • • • price book. Learn more at ➤ On Feb. 11, 1960, the “Comet,” my skinny cat. You Next, bring Comet into a Send your questions or pet Q: I am interested in sell- www.Kovels.com. Federal Communications can probably guess that Star separate room from Star and care tips to ask@pawscorner. ing my antique Lafayette • • • Commission proposes a is the confident one, and in see if he will eat if you are sit- com. fruit jar. Your website lists For more collecting news, new law making it a crim- fact he bullies Comet a bit. ting next to him. A friend of it as worth $4,950. Do you tips and resources, visit inal act to be involved in And skinny little Comet is mine who was experiencing a © 2019 King Features Synd., Inc. purchase items? If not, do www.Kovels.com Payola — corrupt practic- very shy — he won’t let any- similar problem with her cats you know a good resource es in the radio and music one except me pet him, and did this and had a lot of suc- to list this item for sale? © 2019 King Features Synd., Inc. industries that involved manufacturing a hit by paying for it to be played to grips with the fact that her that the two started seeing 1940, has had quite a long had a small role in the indie on the air. beloved father was also public each other over Christmas career since landing the role of film “Donnie Darko,” and more ➤ On Feb. 17, 1996, world enemy No. 1 and sent to pris- after having met on set filming Elaine Robinson, who escaped recently voiced roles in the ani- chess champion Garry on. The real Victoria Gotti co- a commercial. An unnamed her wedding with the help of mated series “American Dad” Kasparov triumphs over wrote, executive produced and source told “People” magazine Hoffman’s Ben Braddock, in and “Family Guy.” Deep Blue, IBM’s chess- narrated the film. She gives that they, in fact, were not a the Oscar-nominated classic. What most people don’t playing computer, to win viewers an inside look at the couple and that even more She also starred with Robert know is that she’s married to their six-game match, other tragedies (her brother’s absurd was the rumor that Redford and Paul Newman actor Sam Elliott, who sports 4-2. However, Deep Blue death) that she experienced Theron’s ex-boyfriend, Sean in “Butch Cassidy and the the most famous mustache would defeat Kasparov and shares stories never before Penn, played cupid for them. Sundance Kid.” I remember in Hollywood next to Tom in a heavily publicized Q: I read that the actor told. As for Pitt and Theron watching her on the “Dynasty” Selleck. Ross and Elliott met rematch the following who plays mobster Sonny As for Travolta, while a walking down the red carpet spinoff “The Colbys.” She also in 1978 while filming the hor- Corinthos on the daytime great actor himself, the motion together on the ror movie “The Legacy.” year. soap “General Hospital” is picture “Gotti” was mostly biggest night in They have been mar- © 2019 King Features Synd. going to play John Gotti in panned by critics. Lifetime’s Hollywood, be ried 34 years and have a new movie. Didn’t John version is entirely different, sure to tune in to a daughter, Cleo Rose. Travolta already play Gotti with Victoria overseeing the ABC on Sunday, Probably best known for just this year? — B.A. movie and Benard stepping up Feb. 24, to find his role in “Mask” oppo- A: Yes, you are correct in to the plate as Gotti, a role he out. site Cher, you can see that Maurice Benard played was born to play. • • • Elliott in “A Star Is Born” mob kingpin John Gotti • • • Q: Whatever with Bradley Cooper Subscribe Today recently. He’s a great actor and Q: Is it true that Brad Pitt happened to and Lady Gaga. 882-0050 his fans never tire of seeing and Charlize Theron are Katharine Ross, him getting his hands dirty dating? Will they attend the the actress who Send me your onscreen in organized crime. Oscars together? — S.P. starred in “The questions at For All the Big Events in Life In the TV movie “Victoria A: As much of a gorgeous Graduate” with NewCelebrityExtra@ Let Everyone Know! Gotti: My Father’s Daughter,” couple as they would make, Dustin Hoffman? gmail.com! which premieres Saturday, apparently the news of their — J.E. Place a Notice in the Feb. 9, on Lifetime, young pairing is only a rumor — at A: Ross, who © 2019 King Features Synd. Victoria, played by Chelsea Frei least for now. was born in Maurice Benard Transcript Bulletin! (“Sideswiped”), tries to come The U.K.’s “Sun” reported Hollywood in Weddings • Birthdays Graduations • Military ANSWERS Missionaries Anniversaries Trivia Test Answers Honors & Awards 1. “Butch Cassidy and 6. Alan Shepard, 1961, The Sundance Kid” 15 minutes 435-882-0050 2. Hedwig 7. The black marlin 58 N. Main, Tooele 3. Donald Glover 8. Ho Chi Minh City 8:30 to 5:30 Mon-Fri (closed Sat & Sun) 4. Animal-shaped 9. Florence, Italy crackers then 10. Drachma TOOELETRANSCRIPT known as BULLETIN “Barnum’s Animals” © 2019 King Features Synd., Inc. 5. Badminton TUESDAY January 29, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN B3

MONDAY’S WARM COCOA We all have the opportunity to turn failure into success e just finished 2018. resolve. But it’s up to us to see came in to share some infor- the dawn!” He said. takes to conclude a decade. The 8 in that date is the vision of possibility and mation with me. We sat talk- It is a simple saying to be The lessons I learned from Wsignificant. It is sig- have the faith and resolve to ing comfortably, so I took the sure, and it reminded me my biggest failures over the nificant for a couple of reasons. Lynn Butterfi eld get back up and keep moving opportunity to discuss one of of what Vic Johnson and past 10 years are the very les- First, in 2008 the world faced GUEST COLUMNIST toward our goals. And when my current challenges. He has Napoleon Hill also taught me sons that have yielded seeds of one of the largest financial we do that, it is guaranteed always been kind enough to in their books. So I’ve spent the equal or greater benefit. challenges in history. Second, we’ll have something of great give me good, level headed last couple of days remember- almost every single person had seed of equal or greater ben- benefit to share with others. counsel. He could tell I was in ing conquered challenges and Lynn Butterfield lives in Erda the opportunity to learn life- efit.” I was sitting in an office distress, so he encouraged me then recounting the lessons and is a managing broker for a changing lessons as a result. We all have the opportunity tower the other day, carefully by quoting a common saying I’ve learned as a result. You real estate company. Napoleon Hill said, “Every to turn failure into success, reviewing the details of a diffi- as a way to quickly shift my know what? That little exercise adversity, every failure, every to turn adversity into les- cult business transaction, when thinking. changed my whole mood much heartache carries with it the sons learned, challenges into my friend Kyle Christensen “It’s always darkest before more quickly than the time it THE RIGHT THING Do I tip an instructor even if he’d rather I’d buy his art? couple of readers we’re And if we don’t, tip or no tip? wouldn’t have been insulting to calling Newt and Dot And how much to tip him if we offer $20 from the two of them Arecently took advantage do tip him?” for the $193 course. of a Groupon coupon they Jeffrey L. Seglin Neither Dot nor Newt were “We plan to go again and received for a discounted glass GUEST COLUMNIST obligated to tip their instruc- take another course,” writes blowing lesson. In the class, tor after their class. That they Dot. That in itself seems the which was three hours long, asked if they could was a right thing to do for good ser- an instructor patiently taught thoughtful gesture. vices rendered. them how to create class items able question, but she was sur- Once they considered ranging from a paperweight to prised by his answer. his glass pieces for sale and Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of a small bowl. Each item was “He said ‘yes,’ but that he’d decided they were too expen- “The Simple Art of Business infused with colors of each stu- rather we bought a piece of his sive, they were not obligated Etiquette: How to Rise to the dent’s choosing and they were glass.” to purchase an item even if it Top by Playing Nice,” is a senior walked through the process Dot and Newt took a look was the instructor’s preference lecturer in public policy and right up until the final firing of at the shelf of his glass pieces, over a tip. director of the communications the items they created. which were for sale. If they thought a tip was program at Harvard’s Kennedy The three-hour class for two “It was nice enough,” she warranted for the instructor School. He is also the adminis- typically cost $340, but with writes, “but I thought it was (and clearly Dot did because trator of www.jeffreyseglin.com, the Groupon certificate, Newt overpriced for something we she asked him if she could tip a blog focused on ethical issues. and Dot split the $193 fee for really didn’t plan to buy. We him), then the right thing is to asked if it was OK to tip him generous side when it comes to Do you have ethical questions the class. didn’t want to purchase any.” tip him. They should feel no and then leaving without tipping service providers, par- that you need answered? Send “It was a great class,” writes One goblet, Dot reports, was embarrassment over tipping doing so. It could have sent the ticularly those like restaurant them to rightthing@comcast. Dot. “After the class, I asked $40. him rather than purchasing an unintended message that Dot servers who typically work for net. Follow him on Twitter @ the guy if I could tip him.” But then she writes that they item. He may have preferred and Newt simply wanted to a lower minimum wage than jseglin. Given how much time the found themselves stuck with to sell his pieces, but offering a know if they could tip him so other workers. © 2019 Jeffrey L. Seglin. instructor had spent with the decision of what to do. gratuity instead is no insult. they could decide not to do so. But a 10 percent tip on Distributed by Tribune Content them and how much they had “Are we obligated to buy In fact, it might have been I’m no expert in tipping, the cost of the class seems Agency, LLC. learned, Dot’s was a reason- something since we asked? a bit more insulting to have although I tend to be on the fair enough and it certainly

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homebound. Lunch served weekdays. For in to the volunteer desk at Mountain West Tooele age 60 and above, suggested donation Medical Center, 2055 N. Main Street in is $3. For those under age 60, cost is $5. Tooele. Call Diane at 435-843-3691 with Master Gardener Course Transportation is available to the store or any questions. Enroll now for the 2019 Master Gardener doctor visits for residents in the Tooele Course! This comprehensive 14-week class and Grantsville areas. For transportation Community Closet and hands-on training is taught by USU information, call 435-843-4102. Clean out your closets. The Community Extension Specialists and Faculty. The Closet is accepting donations for gently course is offered on Tuesday nights from 6 Daughters of Utah Pioneers used clothing. Donations are accepted to 8:30 p.m. starting on Jan. 29 at the USU The DUP is seeking any family histories, at your neighborhood school. Contact Extension Offices. Cost is $150 per person photographs, books, stories or vintage Christy Johnson at 435-830-4706 with any or $180 per couple with shared materials. artifacts (before 1900) to display at the questions. You’ll learn about a wide range of topics DUP Grantsville Museum, located at 378 including soils, irrigation, pest and weed W. Clark St. (in the basement of the J. control, fertilizers, food production, and Reuben Clark Farmhouse across from the Moose landscaping. The USU Extension Offices Grantsville Cemetery). For more informa- are located at 151 N. Main, Tooele. Stop by tion, call Ellen Yates at 435-884-0253 or Meals at the Lodge or call 435-277-2409 for more information. Coralie Lougey at 435-884-3832. Visit Friday and Saturday night dinners will be www.grantsvilledupmuseum.com or served from 5-9 p.m. Friday night dinners Upholstery Class www.exploretooele.com. change weekly or you can order from the Would you like to reupholster a chair or menu. All meals are for a reasonable price. two? Come and learn in this hands-on No orders taken after 8:45 p.m. Daily lunch class taught by Joyce Tate– an expert Schools specials are available at the lodge from 11 upholstery instructor. Class will be held a.m. For members and their guests only. February 19-28 (Monday-Thursday) from Story and Craft Hour 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 151 N Main, Tooele. Join us every Monday at 10 a.m. at the Breakfast COURTESY OF GRANTSVILLE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL The cost is $50 plus any fabric or supplies Tooele Family Center-PIRC as we enjoy Breakfast will be served every Sunday you will need. Fabric must be purchased the adventures of books and make fun meeting at 10:30 a.m. Please attend Above are Grantsville Junior High School’s January Students of the Month. Front row: McCoy Castagno, John beforehand. Loveseats may be allowed crafts. For more information, call 435-833- the men’s meeting at 9:30 a.m. and the Eakins, Tyler Tuckett, Charlie Behumin, Brayden Tervot, and Emmaline Anderson. Back row: Mrs. Sagers, Hailey if you have someone to help you with it, 1934 ext. 1410. We are located at West women’s meeting at 12:30 p.m., and enjoy Broderick, Carissa Luna-Trujillo, James Talbot, Wyatt Warr, MaKenna Bohman, Julian Andaur and Principal Charles but prior approval from Joyce is needed. Elementary School, 451 W. 300 South, a great breakfast. Mohler. No sofas or recliners allowed. Register and Tooele. Please enter through the south Veterans Appreciation Dinner prepay with Becky at Utah State University side doors. A Veterans Appreciation Dinner will be at 435-277-2400 or stop at USU Extension held on Thursday, Jan. 31 at 5:30 p.m. in the County Health Building at 151 N Free Preschool Hour Main, Tooele. (Open Monday through Every Tuesday at 10 a.m., the Tooele Super Bowl Party Thursday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Friday Family Center-PIRC has a fun activity hour Our Super Bowl Party will start at 2 p.m. 8 a.m. to noon.) Class size is small so of learning, singing and creating. The class on Sunday, Feb. 3. There will be food, register early. Payment can be made by is for all children up to 5 years old. Please games, and lots of fun. Please plan on check or credit card and is required before come and enjoy the fun. For more infor- attending and cheer for your favorite class. For additional questions call Joyce mation, call (435) 833-1934 ext. 1410. We team. Tate at 435-882-1573. are located at West Elementary School, 451 W. 300 South, Tooele. Please enter Entertainment Utah Hunter Education Courses through the south side doors. “True Story” will be playing on Saturday, The second set of Utah Hunter Education Feb. 16 starting at 6 p.m. Courses will be held Feb. 12, 14, 19, 20 St. Marguerite Catholic School and 21 for Range 23. Classes are held Students of all faiths are welcome from Membership Appreciation Diner from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Tooele County preschool through 8th grade at Tooele The lodge is hosting a Membership Health Building, 151 N. Main St., Tooele. County’s only faith-based school. Appreciation Dinner on Saturday, Feb. Range times will be announced. State law Featuring all-day Kindergarten, all-day 16 beginning at 5:30 p.m. There will be requires students to attend all sessions preschool, junior high grades 6-8, small a band and Valentine’s gifts and raffles. of class. Before attending a class, all stu- class sizes, and an enhanced STEM cur- Please bring your partner for a great night dents must purchase a Hunter Education riculum. Give us a call at 435-882-0081 or of fun. visit www.stmargschool.org. Voucher for $10 from a license agent or Life Line Screening vender, bring the voucher to the class, Life Line Screening will be at the Loyal and give it to the instructor. The voucher Education Order of Moose 2031 on Friday, Feb. includes all costs for the class and includes 22, 2019. They offer safe, painless, non- a small game license that is validated Online courses invasive preventive health screenings not upon completion of the class. For more Online courses in Network+ and Security+ typically included in a routine physical. information call Gene at 435-882-4767 or IT are designed for the IT professional This is a great way to be proactive about Bryan at 435-882-6795. who seeks to upgrade his or her skills and your health, and to live longer for yourself, Senior Center knowledge of networking and security. your family and your community. For only Courses prepare students for the CompTIA The senior center is for the enjoyment of $139 (regularly $149) you can learn your Network+ and Security+ exams. Call all seniors 55 and older. New and exciting risk of having a stroke or vascular disease. Tooele Technical College at 435-248-1800 activities include bridge, pinochle, bingo, Learn more by watching a short video at for more information or to enroll. exercise program, line dancing, wood- http://www.lifelinescreeningblog.com/ carving, Wii games, watercolor class, mov- Get enrolled introduction/. You can register today by COURTESY OF CLARKE N. JOHNSEN JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL calling toll-free at 866-229-0469, texting ies and health classes. Meals-on-Wheels Enroll in training at Tooele Technical the word “Circle” to 797979, or by visiting Eighth-graders at Clarke N. Johnsen Junior High School recently participated in “Reality Town,” an exercise pro- available for homebound. Lunch served College. Sharpen your current skills or http://www.lifelinescreening.com/com- viding real-life scenarios that included career, salary and family situations. The objective was to develop a budget weekdays. For age 60 and above, sug- train for a new career. Most programs gested donation is $3. For those under munitycircle. and a lifestyle while living within the limits of monthly income. Pictured are students receiving free hats and have open enrollment and you can enroll water bottles from representatives from Tooele Technical College who attended the event. age 60, cost is $5. Transportation available anytime of the year. Get a commercial to the store or doctor visits for residents in driver’s license in as little as 4 weeks and 435-277-0087. teers to help us meet the needs of seniors those affected by someone else’s addic- the Tooele and Grantsville areas. For trans- Eagles get on-the-road to a lucrative career. in the community. Many seniors require tion. As a 12-step program, we offer help portation information call 435-843-4102. Tooele Tech also offers CPR classes to its Sunday Breakfasts Tooele Valley Family History assistance and need rides to doctors or by sharing our experience, strength and For more information about the Tooele students and the public on the second Breakfasts will be served every Sunday Center other health professionals. Rides help hope. For more information, please con- Center, call 435-843-4110. Monday of every month. Become CPR cer- morning this month from 9 to 11 a.m. Research your ancestors free with trained seniors live more independent lives. Call tact Terri at 435-313-4851. Mobile Vet Center tified at Tooele Tech. For more informa- Order from the menu or have the special FamilySearch volunteers at the Tooele 435-843-4114 for more information. The tion, call 435-248-1800 or visit tooeletech. Children’s Choir Auditions To better serve veterans located in Tooele for $5. Adults pay $7 from the menu and Valley Family History Center, 751 N. 520 Grantsville and Tooele Senior Centers edu. Rising Voices Children’s Choir is an audi- County, the Mobile Vet Center (MVC) will children 11 years and under are $3.50. Bad East, Tooele. Phone 435-882-1396. Hours also are in need of volunteers. For more tioned children’s choir for children 7-14 visit Tooele every Wednesday from 10 Beer is available. Public invited. of operation: Tuesday through Friday, information about volunteering at the Train to work years of age. The talented Katelynd Blake, a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the eastern side of the 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday Grantsville Center, call Dan at 435-843- Tooele Technical College’s new Software Aerie Meetings owner and director of Blake Music Studios, WalMart parking lot, 99 W. 1280 North, evenings 7-9 p.m. Wednesday evenings 4753. For volunteering at the Tooele Development program and Nail Our Aerie Meetings will be held Thursday, directs the choir. Blake has a degree in Tooele. The MVC provides free, confiden- by appointment only. Special classes Center, call Debbie at 435-843-4103. Technician program have immediate Feb. 14 and 28 at 8 p.m. vocal performance and has taught at the tial counseling for theater veterans of all offered regularly. Call the center for more openings. Train to work in the computer Life’s Worth Living Foundation collegiate level. If your child loves to sing conflicts. For further information contact information. software industry or own your own busi- State Trap Shoots Suicide support group meetings are and you are looking for an exceptional Dave Brown at 801-255-1499, call our 24/7 ness as a licensed nail technician. Visit The State Trap Shoots will be held Sunday, Tooele Family Al-Anon held every fourth Thursday at 7 p.m. at musical experience for them, this is it. For national call center 1-877-WARVETS or tooeletech.edu for more information. Feb. 10, 17, and 24. Al-Anon meetings are held Wednesdays Mountain West Medical Center, 2055 N. more information and to register for an visit vetcenter.va.gov at 11 a.m. in the Tooele Pioneer Museum’s Adult Education Auxiliary Meetings Main Street in Tooele, in the classroom by audition, please visit blakemusicstudios. basement at the back of the building. For the cafeteria. If you struggle with suicidal com or call 435-277-0755. Donate to library Get your high school diploma this year at The auxiliary meetings will be held on questions or more information, please thoughts or have lost a loved one to sui- Please remember the “Friends of the the Tooele Community Learning Center. Monday, Feb. 11 and 25. All meetings will Rocky Mountain Hospice Tooele City Library” while doing home call Allene at 435-830-0465 or Elizabeth at cide, please plan on attending. Please go All classes required for a high school begin at 7:30 p.m. Want to have more meaning in your life. cleaning and donate your used books to 435-884-0825 or 435-241-9200. on Facebook and like our page to keep diploma, adult basic education, GED prep- Do you want to do something that is the bookstore in the library. Money from Family Night Dinner and Bingo current with our latest news and events. aration and English as a second language Tooele Al-Anon Choices 4U satisfying and of great service to your book sales is used to support programs Saturday, Feb. 2 will be Family Night Contact us on that page. Visit lifesworth- are available. Register now to graduate This group meets Sundays at 5 p.m. at the community? Then become a Rocky within the library. The library is located at Dinner and Bingo starting at 6:30 p.m. livingfoundation.com or call 435-248-LIVE. — just $50 per semester. Located at 211 Mountain Faith Lutheran Church, 560 S. Mountain Hospice volunteer. No experi- 128 W. Vine St. For more information, call Tooele Blvd. Call 435-833-8750. Adult edu- Joint State Visitation Main St., Tooele. For more information, Disabled American Veterans ence required. All training, background 435-882-2182 or go online to tooelecity. cation classes are for students 18 and over. The Joint State Visitation will be on contact Gesele at 435-224-4015 or Jo-Ann Chapter 20 check and TB tests provided by Rocky org. Thank you for your support. at 435-849-4180. ESOL Saturday, Feb. 16 at 12 noon in Pleasant The “Jordan M. Byrd” Tooele County Mountain. The only requirement is your Grove. desire to help someone in need. Please Books for the Whole Family ESOL conversational classes are held Chapter for the Disabled American Alcoholics Anonymous contact Diane Redman at Rocky Mountain Donated children’s books and paperbacks Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Tooele Planning Meeting Meetings are held daily at noon and 8 Veterans holds monthly general member- are for sale for 25 cents, and hard-covers ship meetings at the Pioneer Museum, Hospice at 801-397-4904. Community Learning Center. ESOL stu- Our planning meeting for March will be p.m. at the Oasis Alano Club, 1120 W. are being sold for $1 from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 47 E. Vine Street in Tooele, every third dents may also come anytime the center is held on Tuesday, Feb. 19 at 6 p.m. Utah Ave. For more information, contact The Next Chapter on Fridays, 5-8 p.m. on Mondays and 11 Thursday of the month at 8 p.m. Those open for individualized study. Registration Lance at 435-496-3691 or Wendy at 801- The Next Chapter is a free social support a.m. to 2 p.m. on Tuesdays at the Tooele who wish to attend the leadership meet- is $50 per semester. Located at 211 Tooele Auxiliary PPs Dinner 694-2624. and educational program to help widows City Library. All proceeds go back to the ing at 7 p.m. are welcome to listen to the Blvd. Call 435-833-8750 for more informa- The next PPs dinner will be held and widowers adjust to the loss of their library for projects and programs. appointed members’ meeting. All Tooele tion. Wednesday, Feb. 20. All PPs are invited to Alcoholics Anonymous spouse through monthly activities. You County veterans are invited to attend. attend, so please come and socialize! Alcoholics Anonymous meetings are also are invited to join others who are on the Bingo is back Early Head Start Disabled American Veterans (DAV) will held every Tuesday and Thursday at 7 same page as you, to begin a new chapter St. Marguerite Catholic Church has started Do you have a child under age 3? Are you hold its monthly executive and general p.m., at St. Barnabus Church, 1784 Aaron in your life story. Call Sarah with Tooele its bingo games again on Fridays starting currently pregnant? VANTAGE Early Head meetings on the third Thursday of every Elks Dr., Tooele. County Aging Services at 435-277-2456 for at 6:45 p.m. Come and have a good time. Start is a free program for eligible families month at the Pioneer Museum (rear more details. Food is available. Call 435-882-3860 with that offers quality early education for Meetings Young People in Recovery entrance). The executive meeting will questions. infants and toddlers in the home; parent Lodge meetings are held the second and Young People in Recovery (YPR) hold be at 7 p.m. and the general meeting Sons of Utah Pioneers education; comprehensive health services fourth Tuesday of every month. House all recovery meetings on Thursdays at 6 will be at 8 p.m. The DAV is looking for Anyone interested in the history of Tooele Grantsville to women before, during and after preg- committee meetings are held every third p.m. in the Grantsville City Library, and volunteer drivers — no DAV membership City, Tooele County or Utah pioneers, we nancy; nutrition education and family Tuesday of the month. All members are also on the first and third Friday of the is required. Will need a VA physical. No need you. Please come and join us for a GHS Hall of Fame Induction support services. Call 435-841-1380 or welcome and encouraged to attend. month at 5:30 p.m. in the Remington Park monthly meetings are held in December. potluck social dinner at the LDS church, 801-268-0056 ext. 211 to apply or for free Apartments’ Clubhouse, 495 W. Utah Ave., Call commander James Yale at 435-849- 192 W. 200 South, Tooele. For more infor- Ceremony additional information. Snacks Tooele. Questions contact Adam at 480- 0521 or senior vice commander Dustee The GHS Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony Hungry? Need a snack? Available in the mation, please contact Joe Brandon, 435- 695-6611, Audrey 435-255-9518 or Heidi at Thomas at 435-830-8487. will be held on Thursday, Jan. 31 during Free developmental evaluation social quarters, during business hours: 830-9783 or 435-830-9784. The local Sons 435-255-9905. of Utah Pioneers meets the first Thursday half time of the Girls Basketball game DDI VANTAGE Early Intervention offers Nachos $2.50, hot dogs $2, burgers $3.75 Health Department and Aging of each month at 6:30 p.m. against Morgan High School. All past Hall a variety of services to families with ($4 with cheese), chicken sandwich $3.75 Family support group Services hours of Fame inductees are invited to attend. A infants and toddlers from birth to age 3. ($4 with cheese) and personal pizzas $3. Get your loved one sober. The USARA The Tooele County Health Department TC Squares Dance Club reception will be held in their honor at 6 Individualized services are available to Craft family support group is held and Aging Services’ new hours of opera- The TC Squares Dance Club has begun p.m. in the GHS Auditorium, 155 E. Cherry enhance development in communication, Groups and Events Mondays at 6 p.m. in the large reading tion are Monday-Thursday, 8 a.m. to 6 dancing again on Mondays at the Clarke St., Grantsville. motor development, cognition, social/ room at the Tooele City Library. Group p.m., and Friday from 8 a.m. to noon. Johnson Jr. High Cafetorium, 2152 N. 400 books and materials provided. Craft is a emotional development, self-help skills Museum volunteers needed Check out our calendar on our main page West, Tooele, from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Please Grantsville Irrigation Company and health concerns. Contact us for a free free program for family members who Annual Meeting Tooele Valley Museum & Historical Park is for holiday hours and closures. For more bring finger food to share. For more infor- developmental evaluation at 435-833- have a loved one with a substance use information call 435-277-2301. mation, contact Woody at 435-850-2441, The Annual Meeting of the Shareholders seeking volunteers. Do you enjoy history 0725. disorder. For more information, call Heidi Roberta at 801-349-5992 or visit the club’s of Grantsville Irrigation Company will be or science? Volunteers at the museum can Warr at 435-255-9905. Parkinson’s disease Support website at tcsquares.com. held on Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2019 at 7 gain new skills or practice old ones. We are looking for people to help with orga- Alzheimer’s Caregiver Group Group p.m. at the Grantsville Irrigation Company Charity A diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease can be Tooele County Homemakers nization, exhibit development, gardening Join us the 2nd Monday of each month offices, 411 S. West St., Grantsville. We overwhelming for the newly diagnosed. From February to May, the Homemakers and educational program development. from 2-3 p.m. at Mountain West Medical will elect three members to the Board Tooele Children’s Justice Center Tooele has a support group for persons will meet on the first Tuesday of every Tooele Children’s Justice Center is in Volunteer positions are seasonal and year Center in Tooele. The Tooele County of Directors, give a financial report, and with Parkinson’s disease and their caregiv- month. All meetings will be held from 10 need of DVD-Rs, soda, bottled water and round. Scheduling is flexible. Volunteers Health Department’s Aging Services pro- discuss a review of the 2018 year. For ers. You can learn how others are coping a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the USU Extension snacks. We appreciate all donations. For must be at least 16 years old. To apply or gram is the sponsor for these Alzheimer’s proxy voting forms, contact the office at with PD and how to live well. We meet the Building auditorium, 151 N. Main St., inquiries or drop-off, call 435-843-3440. 25 request more information, send email to: Association Caregiver Support Groups. 435-884-3451. third Friday of each month from 1-2 p.m. Tooele. For more information call Thiel at S.100 East, Tooele. [email protected] The groups are designed to provide emo- at Tooele Technology College, 88 S. Tooele 435-238-8245 or Eileen at 435-882-5009. Share the past tional, educational and social support for Blvd., Tooele. For information, call Hal at Share the past, submit a history, obitu- United Methodist Dinner Tooele Gem and Mineral Society caregivers. Questions call 435-277-2440. Tooele County Quilters The Tooele Gem and Mineral Society club 435-840-3683. ary, or a picture of a deceased relative. Tooele United Methodist Church offers a All meetings are held on the third Tuesday meets the third Tuesday of the month The Family History Center in Grantsville free dinner every Wednesday. Coffee and Food Addicts in Recovery of each month in the Tooele County (except June, July and Aug), 7:30-9:30 p.m. Tooele Naranon “Circle of Hope is assembling a record of Grantsville social hour starts at 4 p.m. and dinner is Anonymous Health Dept. auditorium. Dues are $20 per residents. Your submission may be made served from 5-6 p.m. All are welcome. in the Pioneer Museum downstairs confer- Are you having trouble controlling the to Recovery” Tooele Naranon meets Thursdays at 6:30 year to be paid at the first meeting. For by emailing to [email protected] or by ence room located at 47 E. Vine St. Tooele. way you eat? Food Addicts in Recovery p.m. at 134 W. 1180 North, Ste. 4 in Tooele more information, call 435-843-7649. coming into the center at 115 E. Cherry St., First Baptist Food Pantry Come learn about rocks, minerals and Anonymous (FA) is a free, 12-step recov- (Bonneville Mental Health). Open to all or by mail to PO Box 744, Grantsville, Utah The First Baptist Church in Tooele is offer- ways to craft them and enjoy field trips ery program for anyone suffering from 84074. Come in and receive help from our ing an emergency food pantry to meet for rock collecting. Membership is $15 per food addiction. Meetings are held every trained consultants. For more information, the needs of our community. Hours are year. For more information, send ques- Saturday at 9 a.m. at the Pioneer Museum, call 435-884-5018 or 435-224-5010. Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon. First tions to tooelegemandmineralsociety@ 47 E. Vine Street in Tooele. Enter at the Bulletin Board Policy Baptist Church is located at 580 S. Main gmail.com. north back entrance. For more informa- If you would like to announce an upcoming event, contact the Transcript-Bulletin at Senior Center Street. For information, call 435-882-2048. 882-0050, fax to 882-6123 or email to [email protected]. “The Bulletin Tooele Valley Free Masons tion, call Millicent at 435-882-7094 or The senior center is for the enjoyment of Colleen at 435-882-9019 or visit www. Board” is for special community events, charitable organizations, civic clubs, non-profit all seniors age 55 and older. For informa- Baby blankets needed Tooele Valley Free Masons meet the organizations, etc. For-profit businesses should contact the advertising department. Baby blankets are needed for the nurs- second Friday of each month for din- foodaddicts.org. Everyone is welcome to tion, call 435-884-3446. Activities include attend. Please limit your notice to 60 words or less. The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin cannot Bunco, exercise programs, bingo, ceram- ery at Mountain West Medical Center. ner and socializing. If you are interested guarantee your announcement will be printed. To guarantee your announcement please ics, pinochle, movies and wood- carving, Blankets should be new and in good or have questions, please join us at the Tooele County Aging call the advertising department at 882-0050. Information must be delivered no later etc. Meals-on-Wheels is available for the condition. Homemade blankets are also Lodge, located at the corner of Settlement Tooele County Aging is looking for volun- than 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date. accepted if new. Donations can be turned Canyon Road and state Route 36, or call at TUESDAY January 29, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN B5 Great Savings on Books at the Tooele Transcript Bulletin Visions of America Photographing Democracy Visions of America addresses a single question: How do you photo- graph democracy? After all, democracy is an idea; and not something one can easily wrap one’s lens around. 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Come along on a fascinating journey back to Turn of at the Tooele Transcript Bulletin the Century New England; to Martha’s Vineyard, Cape Cod, Old York, the Great Shell Mounds of Damariscot- ta, Newport, Old Saybrook, Cuttyhunk and dozens of 58 N. Main – Tooele other areas. Mon-Fri: 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. • Sat-Sun: closed Reproduced with illustrations from the actual turn- of-the-century New England magazines in which they first appeared, these articles by the well-known au- thors of that era bring the magic of the New England TOOELE Coast to life as no modern-day author can achieve. RANSCRIPT Sail on into “living” history with T Tales of the New England Coast. ULLETIN Only B $1095 PUBLIC NOTICE Notice is Hereby Given that the Tooele City Redevelopment PUBLIC NOTICE Agency (RDA) of NOTICE IS HERBY Tooele City, Utah, will GIVEN THAT the meet in a Business Tooele Planning Com- Meeting, on Wednes- mission will hold a day, January 30, 2019 public hearingTUESDAY during at January5:00 pm. The29, 2019Meet- B6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN their business meeting ing will be Held in the scheduled for Febru- Tooele City Large ary 13, 2019, at 7:00 Conference Room, lo- p.m. in the City Coun- cated at 90 North Main cil Chambers of City Street, Tooele, Utah. To place your Classified ad Hall locatedTo place at 90 your1. Open Classified Meeting ad call 435-882-0050 North Main Street,call 435-882-00502. Roll Call Tooele, Utah. 3. Close Meeting to Public Hearing & Deci- Discuss CLASSIFIEDsion on a Conditional - Property Acquisition Use Permit to allow - Litigation the use of “Chemical - Personnel Rates for the Tooele Transcript Bulletin, Manufacture and Stor- 4. Discussion CLASSIFIED LINE AD RATES published every Tuesday and Thursday Classified ad deadlines: Monday 4:45 p.m. for Tuesday edition • Wednesdayage” 4:45 for p.m. Savage for Thursday- Review RDAedition Bylaws All classified line ads running in the Tooele Transcript Bulletin on Tuesday or Thursday will automatically run in the Tooele Valley Extra, a separate publicationTooele that is delivered Transload, to all nonsubscribers an & of Citythe Tooele Charter Transcript Bulletin. TWENTY WORDS OR LESS MONTHLY RATE industrial rail port, lo- - Future Vision of RDA An ad running a minimum of 8 consecutive issues NOTICE Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. does not endorse, promote, or encourage the purchase of any product All real estate advertised in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which $ 50 After 20 words or service advertised in this newspaper. Advertisements are the sole responsibility of the advertiser. Transcript makes it illegal to advertise “any preference,cated limitation, at 345 or discrimination South based- Strategic on race, religion, Planning sex or national 30¢ per word/issue $2.00 per word over 20 words Bulletin Publishing Co. hereby disclaims all liability for any damages suffered as the result of any advertisement in origin, or any intention to make any Kirasuch preference, Drive limitation in the or discrimination.” I In- 5. TheAdjourn Tooele Transcript-Bulletin will 6 $ the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. is not responsible for any claims or representations not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that Bold/boxed ads extra made in advertisements in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. The Tooele Transcript- Bulletin has the sole authority to edit all dwellings advertised in this paperdustrial are available zoningon an equal opportunity district basis.Michelle Y. Pitt Bold type 5¢ per word/issue 25 No credit for stopped ads. Includes and locate any classified advertisement as deemed appropriate. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company reserves on approximately 61 Tooele City Boxed ads 50¢ per issue (20 words or less) the right to refuse any advertisement. 4 runs in the Tooele Valley Extra acres. Recorder/RDA Secre- Pursuant to the Ameri- tary cans with Disabilities Pursuant to the Ameri- Services Miscellaneous Miscellaneous Livestock Business Homes Public Notices Act,Public individuals Notices need- cansPublic with Notices Disabilities Opportunities Meetings ing specialMeetings accommo- Act, IndividualsMeetings Need- dation during this ing Special Accommo- Craftmatic Adjustable If you sell Insurance, Need to sell that new Small Business own- Planning on selling LEPC Agenda meeting should notify dations Should Notify Beds for less! Up to promote a hospital or champion bull or your ers: Place your clas- your home, you could Agenda for the LEPC Andrew Aagard, City Michelle Y. Pitt, Tooele ALTERATIONS 50% Off Leading an ambulance serv- yearling calves? sified ad in 45 news- be sending your sales meeting to be held Planner, at (435) City Recorder, at and AWARD Competitors. #1 ice, place your classi- Place your classified papers throughout points to up to Wednesday January 843-2132 or TDD 843-2110 or michel- WINNING Rated Adjustable fied ad in all 47 of ad into 47 newspa- Utah for only $163. 340,000 households 30th, 2019 at 1:30 (435) 843-2180 prior to [email protected], Bed. Trusted Over 40 Utah's newspapers. pers, find your buyers for 25 words, and $5. at once. For $163. p.m. at the Tooele the meeting. Prior to the Meeting. Years. All Mattress The cost is only $163. quickly. For only per word over 25. you can place your County Emergency (Published in the (Published in the TAILORING Types Available. for a 25 word ad ($5. $163. your 25 word You will reach up to 25 word classified ad Management Building, Tooele Transcript Bul- Tooele Transcript Bul- by Shop by Phone and For each additional classified will be seen 340,000 households to all 45 newspapers 15 East 100 South, letin January 29, 2019) letin January 29, 2019) S A V E ! C A L L word). You will reach by up to 500,000 and it is a one call, in Utah. Just call the Tooele, Utah, in the KATHY 1-877-659-5970 up to 500,000 news- readers. It is as sim- one order, one bill Transcript Bulletin at Emergency Operations Public Notices paper readers. Just ple as calling the program. Call the 882-0050 for all the Training room. DIAMONDS don't pay PUBLIC NOTICE call Tooele Transcript Tooele Transcript Transcript Bulletin at details. (Mention 1. Welcome- Chair- Trustees JONES retail! Large selec- Notice is Hereby Given B u l l e t i n a t Bulletin at 882-0050 for further ucan) man, LEPC that the Tooele City tion, high quality. Bri- Deadline for public (435)882-0050 for de- (435)882-0050 for de- info. (ucan) 2. Approve November Redevelopment dal sets, wedding SELLING YOUR notices is 4 p.m. the 882-6605 tails. (Ucan) tails. (Ucan) minutes Agency (RDA) of bands. Everything HOME? Advertise it day prior to publica- 3. Haz Mat reports- Tooele City, Utah, will wholesale! Rocky in the classifieds. Call tion. Public notices DRYWALL: Hanging, MobileHelp, America’s STRAW bales. New Wanted Bucky Whitehouse meet in a Business Mtn. Diamond Co. 882-0050 or visit submitted past the finishing, texturing. Premier Mobile Medi- crop. $5/ bale you 4. Savage Brothers will Meeting, on Wednes- 36 years experience. 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Next meeting- Feb- 1. Open Meeting Deadline for public 99 Percent Reliability. shop offers for gold per acre foot. Call ruary 27th, 2019 B&B Custom paint- Portable Oxygen Con- SELLING YOUR 2. Roll Call notices is 4 p.m. the Unlimited Texts to and precious metals. 435-830-2426 9. Adjourn ing, 435-224-2792 centrator May Be mountain bike? Ad- 3. Close Meeting to day prior to publica- 120 Countrie s This includes broken Filed by LEPC Chair- Discuss tion. Public notices HANDYMAN/SNOW Covered by Medi- vertise it in the classi- w/AT&T Wireless. or unwanted jewelry, man, Bucky White- - Property Acquisition submitted past the REMOVAL, any kind care! Reclaim inde- fieds. Call 882-0050 Call 4 FREE Quote- dental gold, as well Buildings house for publication - Litigation deadline will not be of handyman work, pendence and mobil- www.tooele tran- 1-833-599-6474 as gold & silver coins. January 29th, 2019. - Personnel accepted. snow removal, yard ity with the compact script.com Call or text If you build, remodel or (Published in the 4. Discussion UPAXLP work, leaf cleanup. DIRECTV NOW. No design and long-last- (801)330-8155 after remove buildings you Tooele Transcript Bul- - Review RDA Bylaws Residential and busi- Satellite Needed. ing battery of Inogen 6pm. can place your classi- letin January 29, 2019) & City Charter WANT TO get the lat- ness. Call Jimmy at $40/month. 65 Chan- One. Free information Personals fied ad in 45 of Utah's - Future Vision of RDA est local news? Sub- (435)228-8561 nels. Stream Break- k i t ! C a l l PUBLIC NOTICE newspapers for only - Strategic Planning scribe to the Tran- ing News, Live 877-691-4639 INVENTORS - FREE NOTICE IS HERBY HOME REPAIRS ex- Autos $163. for 25 words 5. Adjourn script Bulletin. Events, Sports & On INFORMATION GIVEN THAT the pert. Doors, knobs, ($5. for each addi- Michelle Y. Pitt Demand Titles. 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Washers/ Tooele! 10 Units Act, individuals need- Exclusively for Seniors 435-841-4001 tions Internet Bun- you need someone $9,995 or less! Vehi- Have $10K In Debt? available.Pet Friendly Call for details dles. Serious Speed! dryers refrigerators, fast, place your clas- Credit Cards. Medical ing special accommo- available.Pet Friendly Call for details freezers, stoves. cle Locator Program dation during this Serious Value ! sified ad in all 48 of for any make or Bills. Personal Loans. 435.843.0717 Miscellaneous Broadband Max - $149-$399 full war- Utah's newspapers. Be Debt Free in meeting should notify Call for435.843.0717 details ranty. Complete re- model! Dlr. #278A. Andrew Aagard, City Call for details $19.99/mo or Broad- The person you are We only sell clean title, 24-48 Months. Call Sell Your Stuff 882-0050 435.843.0717TDD 800.735.2900 band Ultra - pair service. Satis- looking for could be NATIONAL DEBT Planner, at (435) TDD 800.735.2900 AT&T Internet. Get clean Carfax units. All 435.843.0717 $67.97/mo. Both In- faction guaranteed. from out of town. The RELIEF! Know Your 843-2132 or TDD More For Your vehicles come with clude FREE Wi Fi Parts for all brands. cost is only $163. for Options. Get a FREE (435) 843-2180 prior to High-Speed Internet an engine and trans- Router. CALL For De- (435)830-3225. a 25 word ad and it debt relief quote: Call the meeting. Thing. Starting at mission warranty. t a i l s ! - reaches up to 1-844-335-2648 (Published in the $40/month w/12-mo visit www.mycom- 1-866-307-4705 340,000 households. Tooele Transcript Bul- agmt. Includes 1 TB Garage, Yard mutercar.com or call All you do is call the letin January 29, 2019) of data per month. HughesNet Satellite Sales 801-842-1411. Public Notices Transcript Bulletin at Ask us how to bundle Internet - 25mbps (435)882-0050 for all SELL YOUR CAR or Meetings and SAVE! Geo & starting at $49.99/mo! HAVING A GARAGE the details. (Mention boat in the classi- svc restrictions apply. Get More Data SALE? Advertise it in Deadline for public UCAN) You can now fieds. Call 882-0050 Call us today FREE Off-Peak Data. the classifieds. Call notices is 4 p.m. the order online or visit www.tooele- 1-866-484-4976 FAST download 882-0050 day prior to publica- www.utahpress.com transcript. com speeds. WiFi built in! tion. Public notices Become a Published FREE Standard In- submitted past the Author. We want to MEDICAL RECEP- stallation for lease Pets Apartments deadline will not be Read Your Book! TIONIST wanted 4 customers! Limited for Rent accepted. Dorrance days a week for T i m e , C a l l UPAXLP Publishing-Trusted by Pampered Pet Re- scheduling and pa- 1-844-294-9882 1BDRM BASEMENT Authors Since 1920 sort tient check in for busy apartment $500 plus Town of Stockton Book manuscript sub- Sleep Apnea Patients - Quality pet care for Tooele clinic. Experi- $300 deposit. No Planning Commission missions currently be- If you have Medicare over 30 years. ence preferred but smoking, no pets. Public Notice ing reviewed. Com- coverage, call Verus Dog & Cat boarding not required. Email 435-882-1442 or Planning Commission prehensive Services: Healthcare to qualify 435-884-3374 resumes to dolores- 435-830-5651. Meeting LISTINGS NEEDED! Consultation, Produc- for CPAP supplies for pamperedpetresort.com [email protected] or February 5th 2019 - tion, Promotion and little or no cost in min- mail to 1376 E 700 S, LARGE 2BDRM 7:00 p.m. MST 18 1.5bth, washer dryer Distribution Call for utes. Home Delivery, RUSH Tooele UT 84074 North Johnson Street hookups, enclosed Your Free Author`s Healthy Sleep Guide LAKE Stockton, Utah 84071 Selling Homes for SELL YOUR CAR or patio, covered park- Guide and More - FREE! KENNELS. Agenda Item boat in the classi- ing. Rent $850/mo, 1-877-590-6025 or Our customer care Dog & Cat boarding, Public Notice fieds. Call 882-0050 deposit $850. No visit http://dor- agents await your obedience training. For Conditional Use Top Dollar! How? or visit www.tooele- smoking no pets. ranceinfo.com/Utah call. 1-866-824-0046 Call (435)882-5266 Permit Ordinance Pro- transcript. com or (435)241-9118 posed Change BECOME A SUB- BECOME A SUB- rushlakekennels.co e-mail your ad to (Published in the • Availability and Response to all Parties in a SCRIBER. 882-0050 SCRIBER. 882-0050 m tbp@tooeletranscript. Homes for Tooele Transcript Bul- Timely Manner. com letin January 29, 2019) Rent • Experienced Negotiator: Corporate Experience SELL YOUR com- JUVENILE COURT FARMHOUSE FOR puter in the classi- with Public & Private. DISTRICT COURT rent $1,250/mo in- fieds. Call 882-0050 • Knowledge of all aspects of homes and properties. LEGAL DEFENDER cludes utilities, please or visit www.tooele- call for information transcript. com LEGAL DEFENDER 801-518-8670. Avail- • Honesty, Patience and Knowledge in Guiding MONTHLY CONFLICTS able immediately. DEADLINES FOR others. McKean property. classifieds ads are CONTRACT M o n d a y a n d • Marketing to every eyeball searching. CONTRACT SELLING YOUR Wednesdays by 4:45 Tooele County is seeking letters of interest HOME? Advertise it • House Prep saving sellers money on Non issues. Tooele County is seeking letters of interest p.m. from Utah-licensed attorneys to provide in the classifieds. Call HAVE A good idea for from Utah-licensed attorneys to provide 882-0050 or visit a story? Call the • Helps with Necessary Repairs to remove legal defender services in the Tooele County legal defender services in the Tooele County www.tooeletran Transcript and let us buyer concerns. District Court. The contract pays $4,380 script.com know 882-0050. Juvenile Court when the regularly assigned per month, and the start date will be March • And much more!! legal defenders have conflicts. The contract 1, 2019. Legal Defender will also perform pays $1,000 per month, and the start date conflict counsel work in the Tooele County Your in Good Hands! will be March 1, 2019. Legal Defenders Justice and Juvenile Courts. Legal Defenders work as independent contractors and not as CARRIERS work as independent contractors and not as employees of Tooele County. employees of Tooele County. Needed! A letter of interest must be submitted to the A letter of interest must be submitted to the Tooele County Attorney’s Office, 74 South Tooele County Attorney’s Office, 74 South 100 East, Suite #26, Tooele, Utah 84074, 100 East, Suite #26, Tooele, Utah 84074, telephone (435) 843-3120, telephone (435) 843-3120, For any of your fax (435) 843-3127, prior to 5:00 p.m. fax (435) 843-3127, prior to 5:00 p.m. on Monday, February 11, 2019. on Monday, February 11, 2019. is looking for real estate A copy of the proposed contract can be A copy of the proposed contract can be Paper Carriers obtained from the same office. needs, call obtained from the same office. in Tooele City! Shane Bergen Tooele County reserves the right to reject any or all Tooele County reserves the right to reject any or all applicants. The contract will be awarded by the Tooele applicants. The contract will be awarded by the Tooele County Commission. Tooele County does not discriminate County Commission. Tooele County does not discriminate against applicants because of a person’s race, color, against applicants because of a person’s race, color, If you’re interested please call religion, sex, national origin, age, or disability. religion, sex, national origin, age, or disability. 435.882.0050 435-840-0344 NOTICE: There are delinquent upon the following de- scribed stock, on ac- count of assessment levied on the 1st day of October, 2019, the amounts set opposite the names of the re- spective stockholders as follows: 573 S Hale Grants- ville, UT 84029, owned by Scott and Kristen Anderson, owning 1 share, certifi- cate #2148, owing $399.00 476 S Saddle Road, Grantsville, UT 84029, owned by Steve An- derson, owning 1 share, certificate #2590, owing $211.50 Duane and Charlee Barton , 325 E Pear Street, owning 1 share, certificate #1406, owing $99.00 799 E Saddle Horn, Grantsville, UT 84029, owned by Tyler Beck, owning 1 share, certifi- cate #2738, owing $399.00 144 E Harvest Lane, Grantsville, UT 84029, owned by Kimball Bird, owning 1 share, certifi- cate #2436, owing $186.50 Steven and Debbie Blair, 319 S Ranch Road, Grantsville, UT 84029, certificate #1264 in the name of Robert O and Bette J Williams, owning 1 share, certificate #1264, owing $399.00 Milva Bolinder, own- ing 1 share, certificate #1720, owing $249.00 417 S Hinckley Road, Grantsville, UT 84029, owned by Kevin Burch, owning 1 share, certifi- cate #2879, owing $460.29 Camille Curtis, 239 N Cooley, Grantsville, UT 84029, owning 1 share, certificate #1117, owing $211.50 835 E Deep Wash Road, Grantsville, UT 84029, owned by Josh Davis, owning 1 share, certificate #2565, ow- ing $161.50 27 E Pear Street, Grantsville, UT 84029, owned by Taylor and Janessa Dixon, own- ing 1 share, certificate #2285, owing $186.50 596 E Chan Cove, Grantsville, UT 84029, owned by Chris Em- pey, owning 1 share, certificate #3091, ow- SUMMONS FOR ing $644.60 PUBLICATION 842 E Rodeo Drive, In the District Court of Grantsville, UT 84029, Utah, Third Judicial owned by Brian Gal- District, Tooele lagher, owning 1 County, 74 S 100 E, share, certificate Suite 14, Tooele UT #2534, owing $586.50 84074 644 E Coach Lane, Tracey Bishop Grantsville, UT 84029, Plaintiff/Petitioner VS owned by Scott Greer, Travis Bishop, Defen- owning 1 share, certifi- dant/Respondent cate #3050, owing Case Number TUESDAY January 29,$161.50 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN184300643 B7 326 W Wrathall Lane, The State of Utah To: Grantsville, UT 84029, Travis Bishop: You are Public Notices ownedPublic by Notices Ryan and Public Notices Public Notices Public Notices summonedPublic Notices and re- Water User RebekahWater Ison, User owning Miscellaneous Miscellaneous Miscellaneous quiredMiscellaneous to file an an- 1 share, certificate swer in writing to the NOTICE: #2645, owing $244.78 Deadline for public PUBLIC NOTICE RESOLUTION Complaint/Petition filed There are delinquent Michael or Cheryl notices is 4 p.m. the Notice is hereby given 2019-01 in the case identified upon the following de- Justice, 652 S Hale, day prior to publica- that the Tooele Army A RESOLUTION OF above. scribed stock, on ac- Grantsville, UT 84029, tion. Public notices Depot North Area THE NORTH TOOELE Within 30 days after count of assessment owning 1 share, certifi- submitted past the (TEAD-N), State EPA CITY SPECIAL SERV- the last day of publica- levied on the 1st day cate #1897, owing deadline will not be I D N u m b e r ICE DISTRICT AD- tion, which is 02/19/19, of October, 2019, the $586.50 accepted. UT3213820894, has MINISTRATIVE CON- you must file your an- amounts set opposite 448 S Gold Dust UPAXLP submitted a request to TROL BOARD ES- swer with the clerk of the names of the re- Road, Grantsville, UT the Utah Division of TABLISHING THE the court at: spective stockholders 84029, owned by Elliot INVITATION TO BID Waste Management DATES, TIME, AND 74 S 100 E, Suite 14, as follows: Lawrence, owning 1 Tooele City 90 North and Radiation Control PLACE OF ITS PUB- Tooele UT 84074 and 573 S Hale Grants- share, certificate Main, Tooele City, for a Class 2 modifica- LIC MEETINGS FOR serve a copy of your ville, UT 84029, #2553, owing $211.50 Utah 84074 tion of TEAD-N's CALENDAR YEAR answer on Plaintiff/Pe- owned by Scott and 868 E Rodeo Drive, Notice is hereby given RCRA Part B Permit. 2019 titioner or their attor- Kristen Anderson, Grantsville, UT 84029, that Tooele City Cor- Permit modification re- WHEREAS, in the es- ney at: 709 Fox Run owning 1 share, certifi- owned by Jeremy Mat- poration (OWNER) will quest to include: modi- tablishment of the Drive, Tooele UT cate #2148, owing kin, owning 1 share, accept bids for con- fications to Modules VI North Tooele City Spe- 84074. struction of the Elton When you choose the right pacifier, baby will have a better soothing $399.00 certificate #2531, ow- to change the ground- cial Service District If you fail to file and experience. 476 S Saddle Road, ing $185.83 Park Pickle Ball water sampling from a (the “District”), the serve your answer on Grantsville, UT 84029, 631 E Surrey Court, Courts, according to requirement to an op- Tooele City Council time, judgment by de- owned by Steve An- Grantsville, UT 84029, Drawings and Specifi- tion that TEAD-N can formed an Administra- fault will be taken derson, owning 1 owned by Jeremy and cations provided, and use for supporting soil tive Control Board (the against you for the re- described in general Tips for choosing a share, certificate Shannon Ostler, own- sampling data. Past “Board”), and dele- lief demanded in the #2590, owing $211.50 ing 1 share, certificate as: groundwater and soil gated to it all of the ad- Complaint/Petition. Duane and Charlee #28311, owin g Elton Park Pickleball sampling events and ministrative powers The Complaint/Petition Barton , 325 E Pear $525.41 Court - Installation of a data show that ground- necessary for the op- is on file with the clerk pacifier for your baby Street, owning 1 630 S Saddle Road, new Post Tension con- water sampling is no eration of the District of the court. You can share, certificate Grantsville, UT 84029, struction Pickleball longer necessary, and as authorized pursuant obtain a copy of the (StatePoint) For many par- Space Pacifier is designed #1406, owing $99.00 owned by James Court(s). soil sampling only to the Utah Special Complaint/Petition by Separate sealed bids ents, a pacifier is an essential with extra-large openings in 799 E Saddle Horn, Rasher, owning 1 should meet the envi- Service District Act; requesting one from product for soothing baby. In the shield to maximize airflow Grantsville, UT 84029, will be received by the ronmental monitoring and, the clerk of the court at share, certificate fact, the American Academy of and allow baby’s gentle skin to owned by Tyler Beck, #2988, owing $249.00 OWNER in Room 227, requirement. WHEREAS, the Utah the above address. owning 1 share, certifi- 856 E Rodeo Drive, of the Tooele City Mu- A 60 day public com- Open and Public Meet- READ THE COM- Pediatrics now recommends “breathe” and minimize saliva cate #2738, owing Grantsville, UT 84029, nicipal Offices located ment period for this ings Act, §52-4-202 PLAINT/PETITION that parents consider giving build-up which can cause $399.00 owned by Travis and at 90 North Main, permit modification re- Utah Code Ann. 1998, CAREFULLY. I t a child a pacifier at night and irritation or a rash. For more 144 E Harvest Lane, Ellyse Stock, owning 1 Tooele, Utah 84074 quest will begin on requires that the Board means that you are until 3:00 PM on Fri- for naps during the first year. information on the latest paci- Grantsville, UT 84029, share, certificate January 17, 2019 and give public notice, at being sued for Di- But how can you be sure you fier innovations visit: nuk-usa. owned by Kimball Bird, day February 15, end on March 18, least once each year, vorce. #2532, owing $399.00 are choosing the right type of com/pacifiers. owning 1 share, certifi- 147 E Katresha 2019. 2019. All comments of its annual meeting Dated 12/27/2019 cate #2436, owing Grantsville, UT 84029, Project Specifications must be submitted in schedule Tracey Bishop, Plaintiff pacifier? • Prioritize easy cleaning: $186.50 owned by Jo Trease, will be issued in digital writing to the Director, NOW, THEREFORE, or Attorney With so many options on the Look for a pacifier that can Steven and Debbie owning 1 share, certifi- format (PDF), and may Division of Waste BE IT RESOLVED as (Published in the Tran- market, Christiane Heitbrink, be cleaned quickly and easily. Blair, 319 S Ranch cate #2598, owing be obtained by con- Management and Ra- follows: script Bulletin January tacting Tooele City director of brand development Some of the newest pacifiers Road, Grantsville, UT $399.00 diation Control, Utah 1. The regular meet- 29, February 5, 12, at NUK shares the following are sold in a reusable case that 84029, certificate Parks Department, 90 Department of Envi- ings of the Board, at &19, 2019) 136 E Harvest Lane, tips to help you find the best can be microwaved for an easy #1264 in the name of Grantsville, UT 84029, North Main, Tooele, ronmental Quality, which the official busi- Utah 84074 beginning SELL YOUR CAR or pacifier for your little one. clean -- a convenient feature Robert O and Bette J owned by Danny War- Multi-Agency State Of- ness of the District boat in the classi- Williams, owning 1 ren, owning 1 share, on Wednesday, Janu- fice Building, 195 shall be conducted, • Consider the pacifier that any parent will value. ary 30th 2019 during fieds. Call 882-0050 share, certificate certificate #2439, ow- North 1950 West, Salt will be held at Tooele or visit www.tooele- shape: Look for an orthodon- • Regard its condition: Take #1264, owing $399.00 ing $586.50 office hours from 8:00 Lake City, Utah, City Hall, 90 North a.m. to 4:00 p.m. by transcript. com or tic pacifier that’s shaped like a look at your current set of Milva Bolinder, own- 628 N Warr Street, 84116. Main, Tooele, Utah, e-mail your ad to mom to emulate a natural pacifiers. Are they worn down? ing 1 share, certificate Grantsville, UT 84029, calling (435) 843-2143. TEAD-S will conduct a beginning at 8:00 p.m., All Bidders must regis- tbp@tooeletranscript. sucking motion, such as NUK’s Have they seen better days? #1720, owing $249.00 owned by Patrick We- public information on the following dates: com 417 S Hinckley Road, ber, owning 1 share, ter with the City in or- meeting concerning January 23, 2019 SELLING YOUR reinvented orthodontic nipple. Replace your pacifiers every Grantsville, UT 84029, certificate #2139, ow- der to be considered this permit modification February 21, 2019 HOME? Advertise it Modeled after the natural two months, but especially owned by Kevin Burch, ing $624.64 for Award of Bid. request on Thursday, March 14, 2019 in the classifieds. Call shape of mom’s nipple while when you notice any sign of owning 1 share, certifi- 436 S Stagecoach All communication February 14, 2019 at April 11, 2019 --No 882-0050 or visit relative to the Project breastfeeding, they are accept- deterioration and when your cate #2879, owing Lane, Grantsville, UT 5:00 PM at the Tooele meeting, reserved for www.tooeletran ed by 95 percent of babies, little one has outgrown it. Just $460.29 shall be directed to the Army Depot's Eagle's District training script.com 84029, owned by Brian according to market research, check the age limits on the Camille Curtis, 239 N and Kyle Ann White, Director (or Assistant Nest, building 1005 in May 2, 2019 SELL YOUR com- Cooley, Grantsville, owning 1 share, certifi- Director) prior to the the Theater Room, June 20, 2019 and won’t cause nipple confu- pacifier for the right size. puter in the classi- UT 84029, owning 1 cate #2702, owing opening of bids at: Second Avenue, July -- No meeting sion. The new design is nar- New pacifier options are fieds. Call 882-0050 share, certificate $186.50 TOOELE CITY COR- Tooele, UT 84074. August 8, 2019 rower, slimmer and flatter to offering babies and parents or visit www.tooele- #1117, owing $211.50 67 W Cherry Street, PORATION 90 North Questions regarding September 12, 2019 transcript. com also help prevent teeth mis- more benefits than ever. It can 835 E Deep Wash Grantsville, UT 84029, Main, Tooele, Utah this permit renewal re- October 10, 2019 84074 Telephone: alignment and reduce pressure be helpful to try a few differ- Road, Grantsville, UT owned by Polly quest may be directed November 14, 2019 DEADLINES FOR (435) 843-2143 Brian on the jaw and teeth. ent styles to see which pacifier 84029, owned by Josh Willingham, owning 1 to TEAD-N by contact- December - No Meet- classifieds ads are Roth, Parks and Rec- Davis, owning 1 share, share, certificate ing Ms. Kristyl Bentley ing M o n d a y a n d • Think about baby’s com- your baby likes best; but before r eation Directo r certificate #2565, ow- #3093, owing $186.50 at (435) 833-3257; or 2. This Resolution Wednesdays by 4:45 fort: New pacifiers are putting purchasing any pacifier, make email:brianr@tooele- ing $161.50 In accordance with the Utah Department shall become effective p.m. baby’s comfort at the forefront. sure it will encourage a better city.org or Terra Sher- 27 E Pear Street, laws of the State of of Environmental Qual- on the date of pas- HAVE A good idea for For example, the new NUK soothing experience for baby. Grantsville, UT 84029, Utah and the order of wood, Assistant Parks ity, Division of Waste sage. a story? Call the owned by Taylor and the Board of Directors and Recreation Direc- Management and Ra- PASSED this 10th day Transcript and let us Janessa Dixon, own- made on the 2nd Day t o r e m a i l : diation Control, by of January, 2019. know 882-0050. ing 1 share, certificate of January, 2019, so [email protected] contacting Mr. Rick Jeff Hammer, Board TOOELE The OWNER reserves WANT TO get the lat- TRANSCRIPT #2285, owing $186.50 many shares of such P age at (801) Chair est local news? Sub- 596 E Chan Cove, stock as may be nec- the right to reject any 536-0230. The Per- (Published in the ULLETIN or all bids; or to accept scribe to the Tran- B Grantsville, UT 84029, essary to pay the de- mittee's (TEAD-N) Tooele Transcript Bul- script Bulletin. owned by Chris Em- linquent assessment or reject the whole or compliance history letin January 29, 2019) pey, owning 1 share, and/or other delin- any part of any bid; to during the life of the HAVING A yard sale? certificate #3091, ow- quent fees thereon, to- award scheduleds permit being modified SUMMONS FOR Advertise in the Tran- A Full-Color ing $644.60 gether with the late separately or together is also available from PUBLICATION script to contractors, or to Activity Page 842 E Rodeo Drive, fee, costs of advertis- Mr. Paige. In the District Court of SELL YOUR car in the Grantsville, UT 84029, ing, and expenses of waive any informality A copy of this permit Utah, Third Judicial or technicality in any Transcript Bulletin Just for Kids! owned by Brian Gal- the sale, will be sold to renewal request is District, Tooele Classified section. lagher, owning 1 the highest bidder at a bid in the best interest available for review by County, 74 S 100 E, Every Thursday in the share, certificate public auction to be of the City. Only bids the general public at Suite 14, Tooele UT SELLING YOUR #2534, owing $586.50 held at the principal giving a firm quotation the Utah Department 84074 mountain bike? Tooele Transcript-Bulletin 644 E Coach Lane, business of the corpo- properly signed will be of Environmental Qual- Tracey Bishop www.tooele tran- Grantsville, UT 84029, accepted. ity, Division of Solid Plaintiff/Petitioner VS script.com ration, at 411 So. West SELL YOUR CAR or owned by Scott Greer, (Published in the and Hazardous Waste, Travis Bishop, Defen- TOOELE Street, Grantsville, boat in the classi- TRANSCRIPT owning 1 share, certifi- Tooele Transcript Multi-Agency State Of- dant/Respondent Utah, on the 13th day fieds. Call 882-0050 cate #3050, owing January 29, 2019) fice Building, 195 Case Number BULLETIN of February, 2019, at or visit www.tooele- $161.50 North 1950 West, Salt 184300643 the hour of 7 p.m. SELLING YOUR transcript. com or 326 W Wrathall Lane, Lake City, Utah. The State of Utah To: (Published in the mountain bike? e-mail your ad to Subscribe: Grantsville, UT 84029, (Published in the Travis Bishop: You are Tooele Transcript Bul- www.tooele tran- tbp@tooeletranscript. 435-882-0050 owned by Ryan and Tooele Transcript Bul- summoned and re- letin January 29, 31, script.com com Rebekah Ison, owning February 5, 7 & 12, BECOME A SUB- letin January 24 & 29, quired to file an an- BECOME A SUB- TooeleOnline.com 1 share, certificate 2019) SCRIBER. 882-0050 2019) swer in writing to the SCRIBER. 882-0050 #2645, owing $244.78 Complaint/Petition filed Michael or Cheryl in the case identified Justice, 652 S Hale, above. Grantsville, UT 84029, Within 30 days after owning 1 share, certifi- the last day of publica- cate #1897, owing tion, which is 02/19/19, $586.50 you must file your an- 448 S Gold Dust swer with the clerk of Road, Grantsville, UT the court at: 84029, owned by Elliot 74 S 100 E, Suite 14, Lawrence, owning 1 Tooele UT 84074 and share, certificate serve a copy of your #2553, owing $211.50 answer on Plaintiff/Pe- titioner or their attor- Full Local 868 E Rodeo Drive, Grantsville, UT 84029, ney at: 709 Fox Run owned by Jeremy Mat- Drive, Tooele UT kin, owning 1 share, 84074. certificate #2531, ow- If you fail to file and ing $185.83 serve your answer on Sports 631 E Surrey Court, time, judgment by de- Grantsville, UT 84029, fault will be taken owned by Jeremy and against you for the re- Shannon Ostler, own- lief demanded in the ing 1 share, certificate Complaint/Petition. Coverage In #28311, owing The Complaint/Petition $525.41 is on file with the clerk 630 S Saddle Road, of the court. You can Grantsville, UT 84029, obtain a copy of the owned by James Complaint/Petition by Rasher, owning 1 requesting one from Every Issue share, certificate the clerk of the court at #2988, owing $249.00 the above address. 856 E Rodeo Drive, READ THE COM- Grantsville, UT 84029, PLAINT/PETITION owned by Travis and CAREFULLY. It Ellyse Stock, owning 1 means that you are share, certificate being sued for Di- #2532, owing $399.00 vorce. 147 E Katresha Dated 12/27/2019 Your Grantsville, UT 84029, Tracey Bishop, Plaintiff owned by Jo Trease, or Attorney owning 1 share, certifi- (Published in the Tran- Community cate #2598, owing script Bulletin January $399.00 29, February 5, 12, 136 E Harvest Lane, &19, 2019) Newspaper Grantsville, UT 84029, owned by Danny War- ren, owning 1 share, certificate #2439, ow- ing $586.50 628 N Warr Street, Grantsville, UT 84029, SUBSCRIBE TODAY owned by Patrick We- ber, owning 1 share, 435-882-0050 certificate #2139, ow- ing $624.64 436 S Stagecoach Lane, Grantsville, UT 84029, owned by Brian TOOELE and Kyle Ann White, TRANSCRIPT owning 1 share, certifi- cate #2702, owing $186.50 BULLETIN 67 W Cherry Street, Grantsville, UT 84029, owned by Polly Willingham, owning 1 share, certificate #3093, owing $186.50 In accordance with laws of the State of Utah and the order of the Board of Directors made on the 2nd Day of January, 2019, so many shares of such stock as may be nec- essary to pay the de- linquent assessment and/or other delin- quent fees thereon, to- gether with the late fee, costs of advertis- ing, and expenses of the sale, will be sold to the highest bidder at a public auction to be held at the principal business of the corpo- ration, at 411 So. West Street, Grantsville, Utah, on the 13th day of February, 2019, at the hour of 7 p.m. (Published in the Tooele Transcript Bul- letin January 29, 31, February 5, 7 & 12, 2019) B8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY January 29, 2019

Sondra’s continued from page B1 full-time at Sondra’s Silver Sage. Baldwin did not enter the retail business cold. He has several years of experience working as a manager in the grocery industry, with stints at M&M Distributing and Harmons Grocery. “The area out here is amaz- ing,” he said. “We cater to rock hounders, photographers, fish- ermen, hunters ATV riders and motorcyclists. It’s a recreation paradise. Some big fish have been caught in the reservoir and the farmers know where to find some huge deer.” Along with the cafe, the store features a wide variety of drinks, snacks, firewood, ATV offroad trail maps, Pony Express books, fishing poles and worms. “Our top-selling item is Mountain Dew,” Baldwin said. Sondra’s Silver Sage is open from 10 a.m.to 6 p.m. December through February, and from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. March through November. It’s open seven days a week. The cafe provides breakfast, lunch and dinner. Breakfast items include sandwiches, French toast, burritos, Belgian waffles, omelets and pancakes. The menu features 10 varieties of sandwiches, along with fries FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTOS and tater tots. Some of the top- Brian Baldwin (above) works the grill at Sondra’s Silver Sage Cafe and convenience store in Vernon. Jenny selling burgers are the Cowboy, Baldwin (above right) talks to her daughter, Eden, at the counter. The Baldwins named the business after Jenny’s Firefighter and Vernon Burger. grandmother, Sondra Rigby, who lived in Vernon. Aillen Calegio (right) serves up a burrito, one of the cafe’s Other items include smoth- popular items. ered burritos, taco salads and Nacho Average Nachos. $350 per month. the next services are 30 miles Seven employees work at Fuel is available and recre- “People from Vernon come away.” He estimates the popu- the business during the peak ational vehicles can also set up here for supplies,” Baldwin lation of the town at approxi- season, and one of them pos- on the site at $20 per day or said. “They need us because mately 300. sesses a talent that can make visiting Sondra’s Silver Sage even more unique. Aillen Calegio came to For All the Great Events in Life the United States from the Phillipines in 2007. She lived in Las Vegas for one year and Let Everyone Know! then moved to Vernon with her boyfriend. Place a Notice in the Transcript Bulletin! Five years ago, she learned that people liked to hear her friend called me ‘chicken’ and Lake City, but was not selected Weddings • Birthdays • Graduations • Retirement • sing. I didn’t like that, so I went and to go on the shows. “My friend told me there sang ‘God Bless the USA,’ by “I wasn’t disappointed Anniversaries • Military • Missionaries was going to be a talent show Lee Greenwood.” because thousands try out and on the Fourth of July at the She said the audience only 200 appear on the shows,” 435-882-0050 TOOELE church and she wanted me to enjoyed the song, and now she said. TRANSCRIPT sing,” Colegio said. “I told her I singing is a big part of her life. But Colegio won a karaoke 58 N. Main, Tooele didn’t want to sing because I’m If asked, Colegio will per- contest at the Queen Asia 8:30 to 5:30 Mon-Fri (closed Sat & Sun) ULLETIN B shy and don’t really like being form for customers at Sondra’s Restaurant on Redwood Road around people much. … My Silver Sage. in Salt Lake City three years She usually sings “Coal ago. The next step in her Miner’s Daughter” by Loretta music career is to make a CD BOOK YOUR VACATION NOW  CALL FOR LIMITED TIME SAVINGS Lynn, “Crazy” written by Willie because she said her fans have Nelson and made popular by requested it. Grand Alaskan Save Ultimate Hawaii Tour Save up to Patsy Cline, and “Can’t Help Meanwhile, Sondra’s Silver $500 $900 Falling in Love” written by Sage is a frequent stop for Cruise & Tour per couple with Pearl Harbor Experience per couple George Weiss and made popu- many people. lar by Elvis Presley. “We go out there quite a bit. $ * $ * 12 days from $1,849* 1,599 13 days from $2,249* 1,799 Colegio said “Coal Miner’s It’s a great place and the food Departs June - September, 2019 Departs year-round Daughter” reminds her of life is awesome,” said motorcyclist in the Phillipines. Bill Tarbox, who lives in Mount Enjoy a spectacular cruise & tour between Seattle and Alaska including 7 Enjoy a fully-escorted 4-island Hawaiian vacation with beachfront lodging “When I was a kid, we lived Pleasant. “It’s quite a ride, nights aboard Holland America Line’s ms Westerdam and 4 nights on land. on Kauai, Maui, and the “Big Island” of Hawaii, and a centrally-located hotel out in the middle of nowhere about 91 miles from Mount You’ll cruise the Gulf of Alaska and the Inside Passage—a sea lane teeming in gorgeous Waikiki on Oahu. Includes a Pearl Harbor experience where and we didn’t have water at Pleasant. Last year a whole with marine wildlife, where you’ll pass glaciers, towering mountains, and lush you will see the USS Arizona Memorial and Battleship Missouri. Visit historic the house,” she said. “We had group of motorcyclists rode out forests, with stops in Ketchikan, Skagway and Glacier Bay. On land, you’ll go Lahaina, enjoy a boat cruise on the Wailua River and authentic Hawaiian to go down to a river to get there, probably between 40-50 deep into Denali National Park, tour Anchorage, and see the Alaska Wildlife entertainment and food at our Farewell Feast. Escorted throughout by our water and shower and wash people. Brian actually makes Conservation Center. friendly Tour Directors—your local experts. Price includes 3 inter-island our clothes. Our house was some pretty good French toast  ights. bamboo tree house. It reminds and the burgers are awesome.” me a bit of what it might have Tarbox said Sondra’s Silver been like for Loretta Lynn.” Sage gets crowded in the sum- Colegio added, “I love mer because of the recreation- Vernon. It’s a nice place with al activities in the area. It’s not nice people.” busy during the winter, but A friend who worked at Baldwin does things to attract Sondra’s Silver Sage asked people and customers — like a Colegio if she would like to car show. work there. She has been since Grantsville’s Scott Jefferies March 2015. raved about his first visit to She sang the “National Vernon and Sondra’s Silver FREE ONBOARD CREDIT Anthem” prior to a demolition Sage. derby and has sung at both “It’s a Tooele County hid- the Grantsville and Tooele den treasure,” he said. “Food Save Save $ National Parks $ Senior Citizen centers. Colegio was plentiful, tasty and priced Best of Ireland Tour 500 500 also performed at the Rocky right. I’ll be back.” per couple of the Golden West per couple Mountain Nursing Home and And if Colegio is on duty, he at Canyon Cove Apartments. can hear her sing her popular $ * $ * 12 days from $1,849* 1,599 14 days from $1,849* 1,599 She has also auditioned for songs. Departs April - September, 2019 Departs May - September, 2019 “America’s Got Talent” in Las [email protected] Vegas and “The Voice” in Salt Take the ultimate trip around the Emerald Isle! Starting and ending in Dublin, Visit up to 9 of America’s most spectacular national parks on this incredible enjoy a 12-day loop around the island with an expert local driver guide tour! Start off in fabulous Las Vegas and continue to the world-famous Grand showing you the legendary hospitality and iconic sights of this lushly green Canyon. From there we’ll go on to see Zion’s steep sandstone cliffs, rock nation. See fairytale castles like Blarney and Bunratty. Experience Titanic hoodoos in Bryce Canyon, Monument Valley’s giant mesas, Arches National Belfast in the very town where the grand ship was built. Travel through the Park’s gravity-defying stone formations, waterfalls and granite scenery in Ring of Kerry and see the Cli s of Moher and the Giant’s Causeway, tour the Yosemite, towering sequoias in Kings Canyon, and everything in between— Waterford Crystal factory, and more, on this exceptional tour! America’s natural beauty awaits!

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*Prices are per person based on double occupancy plus up to $299 taxes & fees. Cruise pricing based on lowest cabin category after savings; upgrades available. Single supplement and seasonal surcharges may apply. Add-on airfare available. Onboard Credit requires purchase of Ocean View or Balcony Cabin. For full Set Sail terms and conditions ask your Travel Consultant. O ers apply to new bookings only, made by 2/28/19. Other terms and conditions may apply. Ask your Travel FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Consultant for details. Brian Baldwin serves fresh burgers to customers.