16
T RANSCRIPT B ULLETIN T OOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 Serving Tooele County Since 1894 BULLETIN BOARD B2 CLASSIFIEDS B4 OBITUARIES A6 OPEN FORUM A4 SPORTS A9 INSIDE White’s rezone held again See A2 Benefits of a high fiber diet See A5 Tooele City water tank break-in CEILLY SUTTON STAFF WRITER The tampering of a water well and the facility surround- ing it caused many Tooele City residents to go without clean drinking water on Saturday and part of Sunday. Saturday morning a Tooele City employee discovered that someone had cut a five-foot hole in the fence of well #5 during a routine check of the city’s wells. Well #5 is located on the southeast side of the city. Whomever broke into the fence also climbed on top of the tank and cut the lock that held the hatch leading into the tank, according to Tooele City Mayor Debbie Winn. City officials were worried, because the hatch on top of the tank is big enough for a person to fit through, according to Winn. State officials, the Homeland Security, Tooele County Emergency Management, The Tooele County Health Department, and the City attorney were all contacted, then the city put a no drinking order into place. The no drinking order went into place for residents liv- ing south of Vine Street and east of Main Street at 11 a.m. Saturday. Residents of the city were instructed to use bottled water to drink, brush their teeth, pre- pare food, and wash dishes. Cases of bottled water were provided for affected residents at the Tooele City police sta- tion. Tests were conducted con- cerning the quality of the water and there was no evi- dence of contamination, but the city had to wait 24 hours to make sure, per state law, according to Winn The system was also flushed and cleaned, she said. “This is serious because the city lost thousands of gallons of water,” said Winn. “It took a full day of people addressing this issue.” By 11 a.m. Sunday, the water was cleared by state officials as safe and according to Winn, the water was never contaminated. Because of the seriousness of the problem, the city is offering a $2,000 reward lead- ing to the arrest of the person or persons who tampered with COVID19 UPDATE Rate cases increase, Herbert vows to keep economy open Use of face masks encouraged CEILLY SUTTON STAFF WRITER Cases of COVID-19 continue to rise in the state and Tooele County. Tooele County will stay in the yellow risk phase of the virus for now, accord- ing to Tooele County Health Department officials. As of Monday evening, Tooele County had a cumula- tive total of 202 confirmed cases of the virus with 11 total hospitalizations throughout the course of the pandemic, according to a report by the Tooele County Health Department released bi- weekly. This is compared to 184 cases of the virus in the county on June 18. There have been no deaths in the county because of the virus and currently nobody from Tooele County is hospital- ized, according to the health department. Statewide, Utah state has seen a total of 17,906 positive cases of the virus as of Monday evening, according to the report. This is compared with 15,839 cases on June 18. There have been 158 deaths in the state as of the June 22 state report. A memo released by Dr. Angela Dunn, Utah State Sheriff trying to remain competitive in tough market for employees TIM GILLIE EDITOR Tooele County Sheriff Paul Wimmer is looking for deputies and he would like to look further away than Tooele County for them. Wimmer spoke in favor of two resolu- tions designed to help his department recruit and retain deputies during the County Commission’s meeting on Tuesday night at the County Building. One resolution would remove the requirement that deputy sheriffs, cor- rections officers, court security, and dispatch officers must be Tooele County residents from the County’s personnel policies and procedures manual. Wimmer said sheriff’s office employ- ees are governed by both County and Sheriff Office policies, but putting the residency requirement in County’s poli- cy manual ties the Sheriff’s hands when it comes to responding to market needs when recruiting. “It makes it cumbersome to make adjustments to market needs when it comes to things like residency,” he said. Wimmer pointed to the numerous deputies and police officers from out of county agencies that reside in Tooele County. “It allows them to cast a broader net when recruiting,” Wimmer said. “We want to cast a broader net when we recruit. It becomes an issue when it keeps qualified applicants from apply- ing because if they get the job they Census estimates city growth TIM GILLIE EDITOR Growth in Tooele County’s incorporated cities and towns slowed down in 2019, but growth continued in all but one municipality in the county. The U.S. Census Bureau recently released their 2019 population estimates for cities and towns across the U.S. Tooele County’s six municipalities — Grantsville, Rush Valley, Stockton, Tooele, Vernon, and Wendover — grew in their combined population by 17.7% over their 2018 estimated population. The six cities together grew from 49,874 in 2018 to 51,100 in 2019 for a com- bined total of 1,226 more city dwellers. Leading the pace in percent growth was Vernon. With 17 new residents in 2018, Vernon grew by 5%. Grantsville came in second place with 465 new citi- zens for a 4% growth rate. Tooele City’s 725 new resi- dents ranked it in third place with 2.1% growth. Stockton, with 682 residents in 2018 and 682 Non-resident deputies and county funded retirement sought for deputies SEE SHERIFF PAGE A7 Tooele County COVID-19 Update June 15 June 22 Total cases 170 202 Case rate per 100,000 243 289 Total hospitalized 10 11 Current hospitalized 0 0 Deaths 0 0 SEE TANK PAGE A7 SEE CASES PAGE A7 Cowboys build momentum See A9 Vernon leading growth by percent SEE GROWTH PAGE A7 PARKER DUNN/TTB PHOTO Tooele City water tank #5 sits on hill to the south of the city. Toele City officials declared water in part of the city unsafe on Saturday morning after somebody cut the lock off the access door to the tank. TIM GILLIE/TTB PHOTO A new apartment complex in Tooele City on June 22, 2020. Tooele City grew by 725 residents from 2018 to 2019, according to a U.S. Census Bureau report.

TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    2

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELE

TUESDAY June 23, 2020 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00

Serving Tooele County

Since 1894

BULLETIN BOARD B2

CLASSIFIEDS B4

OBITUARIES A6

OPEN FORUM A4

SPORTS A9

INSIDE White’s rezone held againSee A2

Benefits of a high fiber dietSee A5

Tooele City water tank break-inCEILLY SUTTONSTAFF WRITER

The tampering of a water well and the facility surround-ing it caused many Tooele City residents to go without clean drinking water on Saturday and part of Sunday.

Saturday morning a Tooele City employee discovered that someone had cut a five-foot hole in the fence of well #5 during a routine check of the city’s wells.

Well #5 is located on the southeast side of the city.

Whomever broke into the fence also climbed on top of the tank and cut the lock that held the hatch leading into the tank, according to Tooele City Mayor Debbie Winn.

City officials were worried, because the hatch on top of the tank is big enough for a person to fit through, according to Winn.

State officials, the Homeland Security, Tooele County Emergency Management, The Tooele County Health Department, and the City attorney were all contacted, then the city put a no drinking order into place.

The no drinking order went into place for residents liv-

ing south of Vine Street and east of Main Street at 11 a.m. Saturday.

Residents of the city were instructed to use bottled water to drink, brush their teeth, pre-pare food, and wash dishes.

Cases of bottled water were provided for affected residents at the Tooele City police sta-tion.

Tests were conducted con-cerning the quality of the water and there was no evi-dence of contamination, but the city had to wait 24 hours to make sure, per state law, according to Winn

The system was also flushed and cleaned, she said.

“This is serious because the city lost thousands of gallons of water,” said Winn. “It took a full day of people addressing this issue.”

By 11 a.m. Sunday, the water was cleared by state officials as safe and according to Winn, the water was never contaminated.

Because of the seriousness of the problem, the city is offering a $2,000 reward lead-ing to the arrest of the person or persons who tampered with

COVID19 UPDATE

Rate cases increase, Herbert vows to keep economy openUse of face masks encouraged

CEILLY SUTTONSTAFF WRITER

Cases of COVID-19 continue to rise in the state and Tooele County.

Tooele County will stay in the yellow risk phase of the virus for now, accord-ing to Tooele County Health Department officials.

As of Monday evening, Tooele County had a cumula-tive total of 202 confirmed cases of the virus with 11 total hospitalizations throughout the course of the pandemic, according to a report by the Tooele County Health Department released bi-weekly.

This is compared to 184

cases of the virus in the county on June 18.

There have been no deaths in the county because of the virus and currently nobody from Tooele County is hospital-ized, according to the health department.

Statewide, Utah state has seen a total of 17,906 positive cases of the virus as of Monday evening, according to the report. This is compared with 15,839 cases on June 18.

There have been 158 deaths in the state as of the June 22 state report.

A memo released by Dr. Angela Dunn, Utah State

Sheriff trying to remain competitive in tough market for employees

TIM GILLIEEDITOR

Tooele County Sheriff Paul Wimmer is looking for deputies and he would like to look further away than Tooele County for them.

Wimmer spoke in favor of two resolu-tions designed to help his department recruit and retain deputies during the County Commission’s meeting on Tuesday night at the County Building.

One resolution would remove the requirement that deputy sheriffs, cor-

rections officers, court security, and dispatch officers must be Tooele County residents from the County’s personnel policies and procedures manual.

Wimmer said sheriff’s office employ-ees are governed by both County and Sheriff Office policies, but putting the residency requirement in County’s poli-cy manual ties the Sheriff’s hands when it comes to responding to market needs when recruiting.

“It makes it cumbersome to make adjustments to market needs when it

comes to things like residency,” he said.Wimmer pointed to the numerous

deputies and police officers from out of county agencies that reside in Tooele County.

“It allows them to cast a broader net when recruiting,” Wimmer said. “We want to cast a broader net when we recruit. It becomes an issue when it keeps qualified applicants from apply-ing because if they get the job they

Census estimates city growth

TIM GILLIEEDITOR

Growth in Tooele County’s incorporated cities and towns slowed down in 2019, but growth continued in all but one municipality in the county.

The U.S. Census Bureau recently released their 2019 population estimates for cities and towns across the U.S.

Tooele County’s six municipalities — Grantsville, Rush Valley, Stockton, Tooele, Vernon, and Wendover — grew in their combined population by 17.7% over their 2018 estimated population. The six cities together grew from 49,874 in 2018 to 51,100 in 2019 for a com-bined total of 1,226 more city dwellers.

Leading the pace in percent growth was Vernon. With 17 new residents in 2018, Vernon grew by 5%.

Grantsville came in second place with 465 new citi-zens for a 4% growth rate. Tooele City’s 725 new resi-dents ranked it in third place with 2.1% growth.

Stockton, with 682 residents in 2018 and 682

Non-resident deputies and county funded retirement sought for deputies

SEE SHERIFF PAGE A7 �

Tooele County COVID-19 UpdateJune 15 June 22

Total cases 170 202

Case rate per 100,000 243 289

Total hospitalized 10 11

Current hospitalized 0 0

Deaths 0 0

SEE TANK PAGE A7 �

SEE CASES PAGE A7 �

RANSCRIPTULLETIN

TUESDAY June 23, 2020 www.TooeleOnline.com

TTRANSCRIPTTRANSCRIPTTBTBTULLETINBULLETINBTTOOELEOOELETOOELETTOOELET

Cowboys build momentum

See A9

Vernon leading growth by percent

SEE GROWTH PAGE A7 �

PARKER DUNN/TTB PHOTO

Tooele City water tank #5 sits on hill to the south of the city. Toele City officials declared water in part of the city unsafe on Saturday morning after somebody cut the lock off the access door to the tank.

TIM GILLIE/TTB PHOTO

A new apartment complex in Tooele City on June 22, 2020. Tooele City grew by 725 residents from 2018 to 2019, according to a U.S. Census Bureau report.

Page 2: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020A2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

TIM GILLIEEDITOR

One more time for Joe White, maybe.

For the fourth time, Tooele County Commissioners voted to table the same rezone request from local developer Joe White, until their next meeting in order to get addi-tional information.

That means the July 7 County Commission meet-ing will be the fifth reading of White’s request to rezone approximately 113 acres north of Bryan Road and west of Droubay Road from RR-5 to RR-1.

The County Planning Commission voted to recom-mend approval of the rezone after a public hearing during their May 1, 2020 meeting.

The thing that appears to be complicating this rezone request is that Joe White already has an approved planned unit development - conditional use permit for the same piece of property.

And the County

Commission just denied an appeal from Erda landowners of the planning commission’s approval of White’s PUD-CUP during their June 2 meeting.

The PUD-CUP plans call for 112 homes on the 113 acres with 76 lots of approximately one-half acre, 33 lots of 1 acre or larger, and three lots of one-third acre. The concept plan also shows three agri-cultural preservation parcels totaling 19 acres and a 2-acre park.

The agricultural preserva-tion parcels would be main-tained by a homeowners association or another con-servation entity. They will be deed restricted as permanent agricultural property. T

he farm lot on each agri-cultural preservation parcel will have design and landscap-ing restrictions that limit the design of the home to a ranch/farmhouse style, according to the PUD-CUP application.

White’s rezone request for the property includes 80 units dispersed over 80% of

the property with the small-est residential lot size at 1.25 acres. The plans also show 8.1 acres of parks and 13.5 acres of roads.

During Tuesday night’s County Commission meeting, County Commission Chairman Tom Tripp pushed White to make a choice between the two plans.

White replied that both plans were good plans and he really didn’t have a preference.

The rezone plan was White’s offer of a compromise to Erda land owners that don’t want any density of develop-ment higher than 5-acre lots on the east side of Erda, he said.

The rezone reduces the

total number of homes from 112 to 80, a 28% reduction.

“If the rezone is approved and Erda residents accept it by not doing a referendum against it, I will proceed with the rezone plan,” he said. “If Erda residents don’t like the rezone plan, I will proceed with the PUD-CUP.”

County Attorney Scott

Broadhead clarified that White could have both proposals in front of the county at the same time, but if both are approved, White would ultimately have to choose one of the plans.

The County Commission voted to hold the agenda item to allow more time to gather [email protected]

CEILLY SUTTONSTAFF WRITER

The Tooele City Council voted 4-1 to approve a pre-liminary plan for 32 new townhomes on a mixed-use lot on 50 West during their June 17 meeting.

The vote was 4-1 with council member Melodie Gochis opposing.

Gochis requested the plan

be tabled because of a road in front of the subdivision that needs asphalt repaired.

The preliminary plan for the 32 townhome subdivi-sion, located at 555 S. 50 West, was previously dis-cussed by the planning com-mission.

Tray Baldwin, representing Eagle Point Homes, submit-ted the application to build

on the 2.66 acre property, which is currently zoned MU-G, mixed use general.

The applicant requested that the subdivision be approved with 32 lots that will eventually have town-homes built on them, accord-ing to city planning staff.

The current zoning law in this area of the city allows for up to 16 dwelling units per acre of land. At that density, the 2.66 acres could poten-tially hold up to 45 residen-

tial units.Multi-family lots within

the MR-16 zone, to which the MU-G zoning district defers, do not have a lot size mini-mum, according to city plan-ning staff.

Lots within the potential subdivision would range in size from 0.3 acres to 0.4 acres and will include the townhome, plus the driveway and some landscaping.

Each lot will have access to a privately owned and main-

tained street.The extra vacant land with-

in the 2.66 acres will be open space, owned and maintained by the development.

Lots 12 through 15 of the subdivision will access from 50 West, which is a public right-of-way. Lots 1 through 3 will have access to a 20-foot-wide private driveway, according to city council staff.

The driveway has been reviewed and approved by the Tooele City Fire

Department and is not deep enough to warrant an emer-gency vehicle turn around.

Located on the property are two storm water manage-ment basins next to 50 West that will be privately owned and maintained by the devel-opment.

All of the members of the city council voted to approve the subdivisions, except [email protected]

Tooele City Council approves 32 new townhomes on 50 WestOne council member holds out for road repairs

Grantsville plans to shoot off fireworks on the Fourth of JulyMARK WATSONCORRESPONDENT

Most of Grantsville’s events for the Fourth of July celebra-tion were cancelled because of COVID-19 restrictions, but the city still plans to shoot off

fireworks at 10 p.m. at Cherry Street Park.

“We ask that everyone do their part to stay safe and practice social distancing. If you can view fireworks from another location or your home, please do so,” reads a message on the Grantsville City webpage.

Grantsville City Council spent close to three hours and worked through an agenda of 32 items at its meeting Wednesday night.

The council adopted the 2020-2021 fiscal year budget of $1.5 million and adopted the certified tax rate of

.001945.Mayor Brent Marshall said

if revenues improve later in the year the city could reopen the budget in October to provide pay increases for employees. However, the cur-rent budget does not include cost of living allowances for employees.

“I just want to say this has been a difficult year to try to do the budget. I hope next year’s budget is back to nor-mal,” the mayor said.

Councilwoman Krista Sparks said it is heartbreak-ing to have events cancelled for the Fourth of July, but the

issue is more budgetary than social distancing. She said Grantsville normally spends $36,000 for the Fourth of July.

“We’re in a crunch with the virus and lack of sales tax, but we want to be able to retain all our employees and that’s what makes me feel good about not spending money on the Fourth,” Sparks said.

The council approved sev-eral final plats for a minor subdivision at the meeting, and scheduled a meeting for Wednesday, June 24 to dis-cuss plans for a future major residential subdivision called Presidents Park.

The council also approved initial consideration of an annexation petition filed by the Grantsville Soil Conservation District for about 400 acres that would become part of the planned Lakeview Business Park. The Council also approved initial consideration of an annexa-tion petition filed by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on land east of Sheep Lane that straddles Erda Way.

The city also is seeking requests for proposals for resi-dential and municipal solid and bulk waste collections and

recycling services.Grantsville currently con-

tracts with Ace Recycling and Disposal for residential and municipal solid waste collec-tion with a separate contract with Ace for recycling ser-vices. Grantsville will seek to combine these services under one contract.

Information provided by the city indicates Grantsville would like to maintain its recycling program, but could possibly eliminate recycling services if the provider and the city determine recycling would be too cost [email protected]

ADMINISTRATION

Scott C. Dunn PublisherClayton J. Dunn Associate PublisherJoel J. Dunn Publisher Emeritus

OFFICE

Bruce K. Dunn ControllerChris Evans Office Manager Vicki Higgins Customer ServicePatricia Cook Circulation Manager

EDITORIAL

Tim Gillie EditorDarren Vaughan Sports EditorCeilly Sutton Staff WriterMark Watson Correspondent

ADVERTISING

Clayton Dunn Advertising ManagerKeith Bird Advertising SalesDianna Bergen Advertising Sales & Classified Advertising Manager

LAYOUT & DESIGN

John Hamilton Creative DirectorLiz Arellano Graphic Artist

PRODUCTION

Perry A. Dunn Pre-press ManagerFred Feinauer Production ManagerDan Coats Pre-press Technician

SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $1.00 per copy; $40 per year delivered by carrier in Tooele, Grantsville, Erda, Stockton, Lake Point and Stansbury Park, Utah; $45 per year by mail in Tooele County, Utah; $77 per year by mail in the United States.

OFFICE HOURS: Monday-Friday 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., closed Saturday and Sunday.

CLASSIFIEDS DEADLINE: 4:45 p.m. day prior to publication.

PUBLIC NOTICES DEADLINE: 4 p.m. day prior to publication.

COMMUNITY NEWS ITEMS,BULLETIN BOARD, ETC.:

3 p.m. day prior to publication.

OBITUARY DEADLINE: 10:30 a.m. day of publication.

Publication No. (USPS 6179-60) issued twice a week at Tooele City, Utah. Periodicals postage paid at Tooele, Utah. Published by the Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company, Inc., 58 North Main Street, Tooele City, Utah. Address all correspondence to P.O. Box 390, Tooele City, Utah 84074.

POSTMASTER: Send change of address to:

PO Box 390 Tooele, Utah 84074-0390

435-882-0050 Fax 435-882-6123 email: [email protected] visit our website extension at

TooeleOnline.com

Entire contents ©2020 Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company, Inc. All rights

reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the

written consent of the editor or publisher.

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

County Commission holds rezone application for 5th readingDeveloper has two plans for same property, both involve higher than current zoned density

TIM GILLIE/TTB PHOTO

Looking south along Droubay Road, the property to the left is part of the land Joe White wants to develop.

• Reusable face mask is made of 100% Double Knit Polyester Fabric, comfortable and breathable, soft and skin-friendly, and easy to use. Unfinished edges.

• Comfortable and breathable and will not be stuffy but breathe freely, extra soft elasticized adjustable earloops will make it fit comfortable on your face.

• Perfect mask when traveling through congested airports, work, grocery stores, parks, and busy city streets. These are not N95.

• These Reusable face masks for men, women and children help protect against dust, pollen, allergens, pollution and the help stop the spreading of Covid-19 virus to ensure safe, healthy breathing.

• Black Color only for Adult size. Maroon color for kids size.

Protective Cloth

FACE MASK

58 North Main StreetTooele, UT

435-882-0050

Now Available at ... Manufactured by Game Gear. No returns or refunds.

New Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9AM-5PM

$300plus tax

Adult Size Mask:

$275plus tax

Kids Size Mask:

@TooeleTB

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELEFollow us on Facebook!

Page 3: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020 A3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

Tooele City lowers tax rate for fiscal year 2020-2021CEILLY SUTTONSTAFF WRITER

Tooele City lowered their property tax rate for their 2021 fiscal year.

The Tooele City Council adopted their 2020–2021 budget and property tax rates during their June 17 meeting

The council adopted the certified tax rate of 0.003051 for the 2020–2021 fiscal year, which is a 4.8% decline from last year’s tax rate of 0.003205 for fiscal year 2019-2020.

Shannon Wimmer, Tooele City’s newly appointed finance director presented the pro-posed tax rate and budget to the council.

Wimmer explained that the certified tax rate is based on current taxable property values and is set at the rate that allows the city to receive the same amount of property tax revenue as the previous year with the only additional revenue coming from property new to the tax rolls.

The certified tax rate is calculated each year by the county auditor, using a formu-la provided by the state. The Utah State Tax Commission

verifies the rate before the city and other taxing entities are notified of their certified rate.

That means the only addi-tional revenue is from new property for the year, not from increased assessments of property already on the tax rolls, she said.

“The downside of this is that the property tax rates do not account for inflation,” Wimmer said. “They also don’t account for increased costs that that new growth brings to the city. So, in years like this where the values are increas-ing, the rate is dropped to ensure that the same level of revenue is given.”

Wimmer also pointed out that since the city’s tax increase of 2018, city officials do not want the tax rate to fall too much to avoid being in the same situation that made the city have to increase the tax rate so much in 2018.

“We believe that at least holding the tax rate flat, or even slight increases from time to time is far better on our residents than a very large tax increase that became absolutely necessary in 2018,” she said. “We also believe that

during these unprecedented times, where the economy is in a current state and our residents and businesses are experiencing things that they have never had to face before

that we do not impact them further.”

Wimmer suggested using budget cuts and reserves wherever possible to make up the city’s “short falls”.

“These cuts are definitely going to impact us but we think they are cuts that we can

weather until this comes back and we can still provide the same level of expected service to our citizens,” she said.

During the meeting, city council member Tony Graf stated that he was dreading talking about the certified tax rate in the city, but the

work of the city to take cuts and work through issues was beneficial for members of the community during this time.

At the end of the meeting a vote was taken and all of the members of the council voted to adopt the certified tax [email protected]

Adopted certified tax rate 4.8% lower than last year’s rate

5.7 oz. Reg. $5.798 oz. Reg $5.69 18 g. Protein Reg. $2.79 Keto Friendly Reg. $2.69

3.5 oz. Reg. $4.49 7 tor�llas Reg. $12.39 10.8 oz. Reg. $7.39 50.7 oz. Reg. $3.19

10 oz. Reg. $4.49 1.3 oz. Reg. $5.29 14 oz. Reg. $6.99 12 pieces Reg. $2.39

Reg. $1.70 5 oz. Reg. $4.59 8 wafels Reg. $6.19 5-5 oz. Reg. $5.29

Cassava, Almond or Chickpea

5 Different Flavors

TastyBite

Edward & Sons

Maple & Brown Bu�er

Plus a FREE shaker bo�le!

Total Plant Complex

Peppermint

120 Jelly Bear Reg $17.99

Total Plant Complex

Unflavored

1 fl oz. Reg. $22.99

Gold Goji Blueberry

2 fl oz. Reg $59.99 1 oz. Reg $31.99

22 Different Colors

12 oz. Reg $3.99 12 fl oz Reg $3.49 1.2 oz. Reg $3.79

90 tablets Reb $12.99 37.7 fl oz. Reg $15.99 14 oz. Reg $8.99

Relief from Stress &

Nervousness

Probio�c Air + Fabric Refresh

8.5 oz. Reg $7.99

LaundryDetergent

FourDifferent

Wood Polish

Stainless Steel Cleaner & Polish

Mul�-Vitamins

GingerLemongrass

WellnessBlend

5.6 fl oz. Reg $17.95

Utah lawmakers approve budget, increase school spending

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah lawmakers unanimously approved a budget proposal that would plug an estimated $850 million state revenue shortfall following the COVID-19 pandemic.

The House and Senate passed two bills during a special session Thursday that would impose less than 2% cuts across state government agencies while increasing spending for education and social services such as mental health care, affordable housing and Medicaid growth.

“We’ve tried to surgically go through all the budgets and tried to be fair and take care of the things that are essential to the state of Utah,”

said Republican Sen. Jerry Stevenson.

Lawmakers used more than $680 million from their reserves, as well as federal dollars from the CARES Act to balance the budget. The mea-sure will drain nearly a third of the state’s rainy day funds, The Salt Lake Tribune reports.

Senate President Stuart Adams praised the state’s fru-gal spending prior to the pan-demic and said he felt ``pretty fortunate to be in Utah.’’

“Because of the efforts that have been made by previous legislators, people that have sat in our seats before us, we have the ability to do those types of things because we pre-pared well,” Adams said.

MY ANSWER

Cast all your care upon JesusFrom the writings of the Rev. Billy Graham

Q: How does God view sui-cide? - L.G.

A: The Bible says, “The thief (Satan) comes only to kill and destroy. I came that they may have life and have it abundant-ly” (John 10:10, ESV).

God alone is the Giver of life and it is dangerous to take life into our own hands. Such thoughts are not from God but from Satan. There are many reasons that people resort to such a drastic decision as sui-cide, but God has better plans for those who will come to Him. He understands feelings of despair. Such experiences as bad health, abuse, depres-sion, loss of job, etc., lead to feeling worthless, as though no one cares, but we must not let society tell us that because the Bibles tells us the opposite. “Casting all your care upon [Jesus], for He cares for you” (1 Peter 5:7).

Praying to God indicates a knowledge of His power, of His interest in our lives.

Throughout Scripture He has given us examples that when people pray and seek Him, He listens and answers (Jeremiah 29:11-13). In seeking Him in all things, He will guide and direct us in the way we should go - and it will never be sui-cide.

The Lord wants to us to cast our every care upon Him. He stands by to receive us into His forgiveness and fellowship. Becoming part of a local Bible-believing church enhances our lives and exhibits the love Christ has for the world.

Knowing that God cares - and that His people care - makes all the difference in the world. God is sending forth His message of love, but we must tune in. We must be willing to listen and to receive His mes-sage and then to obey it. Turn to the Lord Jesus Christ, the God of all comfort.

This column is based on the words and writings of the late Rev. Billy Graham.

© 2020 Billy Graham Literary Trust

We’re always looking for newsTRANSCRIPT

BULLETINTOOELEContact us today 435.882.0050

or [email protected]

Page 4: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020A4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

To the good people of CHAZ:Greetings and salutations,

my lefty friends! I’m going to help you build your experimental new revolutionary nation — now that you have your borders and armed militia — right in the middle of Seattle.

CHAZ is the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone, made up of sev-eral blocks of Seattle that were com-mandeered by protesters when the cops were told to pull back and let the “people” just loot what they wanted and run their own lives.

“You are now leaving the USA,” says a sign at the border of CHAZ.

Some of the citizens of CHAZ don’t like the name and want it changed to CHOP (Capitol Hill Occupied Protest).

I’m confused. And so are they.But the CHOPitistas, or CHAZians,

do have a collective farm, armed guards, snacks, art projects and most likely poetry readings of approved texts. And, they reportedly even have a “tax” on people and remaining busi-nesses to help with “operations,” but that just might be royalist propaganda.

Building a new nation isn’t easy, my CHAZian friends. But to prove I support true diversity, I’ll write your Konstitushun, so you may organize yourselves, from your collective farms to your appropriate sports activities, and even how best to wear your under-wear.

If you follow the Konstitushun of CHAZ/CHOP, you’ll at least be sure to keep your plants alive, so you won’t go hungry and begin cannibalizing the weak, whom you care so much about.

The first article of the Konstitushun specifies that all plants must be nour-ished with Brawndo.

Because Brawndo has what plants crave — electrolytes. Everybody knows this to be true.

If you don’t know about CHAZ/CHOP, you’re probably still stuck on old COVID-19 news, worried that if you dare gather in groups, you’ll be denounced as murderers willing to spread disease. But then came the George Floyd protests, and public health experts who did not want to be denounced as witches decided we may gather as before.

Even in CHAZ/CHOP.Besides, CHAZ/CHOP isn’t some

fake country. It isn’t some fictional “Idiocracy,” like the sci-fi movie that accurately predicts America’s future, and from which I stole the fake Brawndo idea.

CHAZ/CHOP isn’t fiction like Brawndo. It’s a real, live nation in the state of Washington, which should soon be renamed because, well, the name “Washington” triggers so many people now. They might as well call it “The Republic of Howard Zinn.”

Stay free, CHAZ/CHOP! Never bend the knee to President Donald Trump.

Trump is the only thing that could screw up this brave new world.

So, I’m warning Trump and all Republicans to LEAVE CHAZ/CHOP ALONE.

Don’t be stupid and send in the military, Mr. President. That would be idiotic, and you’ll ruin everything.

The governor of Washington doesn’t mind CHAZ/CHOP being its own country in the middle of Seattle. And the mayor of Seattle doesn’t mind, either. Just let CHAZ/CHOP be, so it can prove to everyone how a people can govern themselves with no laws or law enforcement.

Just let people live in their natural state and just do what feels right. And let’s just see what happens. It’ll be like “Lord of the Flies” but with good cof-fee.

Seattle police Chief Carmen Best said pulling out the police to allow the formation of CHAZ/CHOP wasn’t her big idea. She called it an “exercise in trust and de-escalation” and she’s not even the mayor of Minneapolis.

Now CHAZ/CHOP may even have its own warlord, the rapper Raz Simone. But he hates being called a warlord.

“The President really put a hit on my head,” Simone tweeted. “I’m not a Terrorist Warlord.”

OK, but maybe you better change your name to something a bit more nebbishy, like say, “Fielding Mellish,” the neurotic character played by Woody Allen in the movie “Bananas,” which is about a guy who joins a revo-lution because he’s attracted to a revo-lutionary female.

Yes, I know Allen has been “can-celed.” But “Bananas,” made before Allen’s cancellation, explains so much about CHAZ/CHOP.

Mr. Simone, how about declaring yourself king, instead? But be a good king. Don’t make people kneel, like King Joffrey from “Game of Thrones.”

Either way, warlord, Mellish or king, you must help your people. With everybody in your humid nation already somewhat musky from lack of showers, you must protect the hygiene of the people.

In “Bananas,” the leftist revolution prevailed in “San Marcos.” And the new presidente made some important announcements:

“Hear me. I am your new president. From this day on ... all citizens will be required to change their underwear every half-hour. Underwear will be worn on the outside so we can check.”

Wise words. Underwear outside the pants. For the good of the people.

And what about recreation? You can’t very well allow the people of CHAZ/CHOP to play American foot-ball, which is a violent, crypto-fascist game that glorifies the taking of land.

Why did I decide to help CHAZ/CHOP?

Because here in America, our old, boring “A Republic, if you can keep it” thing is falling apart. It’s not woke enough. We began “decolonizing” our libraries so that now Americans can’t even remember why we started this “republic” thing in the first place.

Hail CHAZ/CHOP.Stay free! And change your name to

Freedonia. It’s smoother, like a good latte.

John Kass is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune who also hosts a radio show on WLS-AM. His e-mail address [email protected], and his Twitter handle is @john_kass.

Peaceful protests can be a good thing

It is my understanding that there is to be a protest scheduled next Saturday June 27, 2020 at 5:00 p.m. at the Tooele City Library. It is being organized regarding those who wish to bring to surface the circumstances of the death of the black man who died in Minneapolis recently. This can be a good thing. A peaceful protest would be in alignment with the teach-ings of the late Dr Martin Luther King, the acknowledged master of this type of gathering.

Unfortunately, we are all aware that malcontents, “ne’er” do wells, and followers of militant organiza-tions infiltrate these things and cause great problems by destroying prop-erty, looting, assaults, arson, and even in burning their underwear. This vio-lence caused great problems for law

enforcement and has recently been the result of the activation of the Utah National Guard in Salt Lake City.

Many of the procedures regarding law enforcement’s escalation of force has been therapeutically dissected by those who consider themselves expert in these matters. We need to support our police actively, and not by just sending cookies down to their office.

Wouldn’t it be great if a huge gathering of responsible citizens of Tooele could gather across the street from the library this next Saturday to ensure that this peaceful demonstra-tion takes place. This act of solidar-ity would probably encourage those malcontents who crash these types of activities to relocate to some place else. By not showing up for such a demonstration, we render passive approval for whatever takes place. This is our value system which these

thugs are going after. We really don’t need the extra drama in our fair City.

Ralph E Pierce Tooele City

Open Forum• Editorial• Guest Opinions• Letters to the Editor

A warning to Trump and Republicans: Leave the nation of CHAZ/CHOP alone!

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Editor Tim [email protected]

435-882-0050

GUEST OPINION

The Transcript-Bulletin welcomes letters to the editor from readers. Letters must be no longer than 250 words, civil in tone, written exclusively for the Transcript-Bulletin, and accompanied by the writer’s name, address and phone number. Longer letters may be published, based on merit and at the Editor’s discretion. All letters may be subject to editing.

Readers who are interested in writing a longer guest op-ed column on a topic of general interest should contact Editor Tim Gillie.

Email: [email protected]: (435) 882-6123Mail: Letters to the Editor Tooele Transcript-Bulletin P.O. Box 390 Tooele, UT 84074

LETTERS POLICY

Here on far-left coast of Canada, there haven’t been any deaths attributed

to COVID-19 since June 5, at the time of this writing. Yet, while hard-hit countries like France are now almost entirely back to normal, despite a couple of dozen COVID deaths per day, places like this westernmost province of Canada, which was mostly spared, are plagued with officials who have clearly not developed the resilience, borne of real crisis, to confidently return to normal despite the relatively low risk of doing so. Instead, officials here are still pretending to be stage man-aging a nonexistent crisis, while talking about its potential to arrive any time now.

The goal of “flattening the curve” has never been to have no new cases. That’s an absurd concept, as no disease has a zero-infection rate, yet it seems to be the objective now in places like this one that were minimally impacted. More people kill them-selves in any given year here than have died of COVID. The record high number of 170 illicit drug overdoses in British Columbia last month alone is greater than all COVID deaths combined. In total, there have been 168 deaths from the disease here since counting began. Four sufferers are currently

in intensive care.Arriving from France — a coun-

try where there are still between 20 and 30 COVID deaths every day, over 800 cases in intensive care, and over 29,000 deaths — the restrictions here are jarringly disproportionate to the impact of the virus in that any limitations still exist at all. Even more shock-ing is the complacency of the aver-age citizen toward them. It might have something to do with the fact that the Canadian federal govern-ment is paying people not to work for the duration of the virus panic, to the tune of $2,000 per month for up to four months — a mea-sure that could be extended.

Like in much of Canada and elsewhere in the world, COVID deaths are overwhelmingly among the elderly in care homes, but officials have people brainwashed to think that it’s just as bad every-where.

Many of us who were subjected to the two-month draconian lock-down in France, including govern-

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot had big news last week — the city is opening up its

iconic Lakefront Trail after months of being closed off as part of a COVID-19 lockdown.

That Lightfoot kept the trail closed even after Chicago had experienced large-scale Black Lives Matter marches — thou-sands during the “Drag March for Change” — is one small instance of the flagrant social distancing hypocrisy across the country in recent weeks.

If it’s OK for throngs of people to pack the streets, and shout and chant to protest the death of George Floyd, it ought to be per-missible for someone to ride a bike along the lakeside while keeping to him- or herself.

Yet, Mayor Lightfoot welcomed the protestors — “We want people to come and express their pas-sion,” she said — and still kept the trail shuttered.

Many of the same officials who were most zealous in lock-ing down their states and cities instantly made an exception for Black Lives Matter protests. Their rigidity became laxity in a blink of an eye. Their metric for reopen-ing wasn’t the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines or any other public health mea-sure, but the “wokeness” of the activity in question.

Visiting the deathbed of a loved one with COVID-19? Absolutely not. Having a proper funeral? No way. Gathering more than about 10 people at a graveside? No one should be allowed to put the public at risk in such a way.

Bringing thousands of strang-ers to march together for hours in spontaneous, disorderly groups? Thank you for your commitment to positive change.

Attending a church service? Well, maybe in a couple of months.

Holding a struggle session with religious trappings where people confess their racism and vow to work to defund the police? Please, let’s have more.

To believe the leaders of Blue America, SARS-CoV-2 is the first virus in human history to have a social conscience — virulent enough in the ordinary course of events to justify the most restric-tive social controls; not such a big deal if it might get in the way of marches for social justice.

The likes of New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio have justified the different standards by arguing that fighting racism is important. Well, so is mourning your dead, keeping your business from being ground to dust and worshiping your God. It’s a sign of a ludicrous-ly blinkered worldview to believe that a protest march deserves more consideration than these other elemental human needs.

Another argument is that the protesters are willing to put their health on the line for their cause. But, until recently, it was said that anyone going outside wasn’t just endangering themselves, but the most vulnerable people in our communities. Why wouldn’t that be true of the Black Lives Matter marches, too?

Don’t expect consistency, or even a serious attempt at it. More than 1,000 public health experts signed a letter calling the pro-tests “vital to the national public health,” thus immolating their credibility on a pyre of motivated reasoning. It’s social distancing for people and activities they find uncongenial, and different rules for their ideological allies.

What a contemptible betrayal of the public trust.

Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

Social distancing hypocrisy

Low-level COVID jurisdictions risk becoming sanitary dictatorships

GUEST OPINION

GUEST OPINION

Timothy H. GillieEditor

Scott C. DunnPresident and Publisher

Joel J. DunnPublisher Emeritus

Tooele Transcript Bulletin Editorial Board

John KassGUEST COLUMNIST

Rachel MarsdenGUEST COLUMNIST

SEE MARSDEN PAGE A5 �

Page 5: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020 A5TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

Although there will be fewer parades, fire-works, and community

breakfasts this year while we celebrate the liberties of liv-ing in a free and independent nation, our hearts should ulti-mately turn to the Author of freedom.

The founding fathers who committed acts of treason by signing the Declaration of Independence were inspired by God to ignite our country’s battle for independence.

The scores of social distance flags flying throughout our community on the Fourth will help remind us of how blessed we are to bask daily in our countless freedoms.

Here is a smattering of quotes from leaders through-

out the years who poignantly wrote of our blessings of free-dom from various angles:

“For, brethren, ye have been called unto liberty; only use not liberty for an occasion to the flesh, but by love serve one another.” – The Apostle Paul

“Freedom is not won on the battlefields. The chance for freedom is won there. The final battle is won or lost in our hearts and minds.” – Helen Gahagan Douglas

“With freedom, books, flow-ers, and the moon, who could

not be happy?” – Oscar Wilde“One flag, one land, one

heart, one hand, one nation forevermore!” – Oliver Wendell Holmes

“Freedom is fragile and must be protected. To sacrifice it, even as a temporary measure, is to betray it.” – Germaine Greer

“We must be free not because we claim freedom, but because we practice it.” – William Faulkner

“Who ever walked behind anyone to freedom? If we can’t go hand in hand, I don’t want to go.” – Hazel Scott

“For to be free is not merely to cast off one’s chains, but to live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of oth-ers.” – Nelson Mandela

“Liberty is the breath of life to nations.” – George Bernard Shaw

“I believe in America because we have great dreams, and because we have the opportunity to make those dreams come true.” – Wendell Willkie

“America, to me, is free-dom.” – Willie Nelson

“May we think of freedom not as the right to do as we please, but as the opportunity to do what is right.” – Peter Marshall

“In the truest sense, free-dom cannot be bestowed; it must be achieved.” – Franklin

D. Roosevelt“The essence of America —

that which really unites us — is not ethnicity, or nationality, or religion. It is an idea — and what an idea it is: that you can come from humble circum-stances and do great things. That it doesn’t matter where you came from, but where you are going.” – Condoleezza Rice

“Humanity has won its bat-tle. Liberty now has a country.” – Marquis de Lafayette

“What do we mean by patriotism in the context of our times? …A patriotism that puts country ahead of self; a patriotism which is not short,

frenzied outbursts of emotion, but the tranquil and steady dedication of a lifetime.” – Adlai Stevenson

“I am convinced that if we are to continue to have the freedoms which came of the inspiration of the Almighty to our Founding Fathers, we must return to the God who is their true author… May we look to him as the author of our lib-erty. – Gordon B. Hinckley

Charlie Roberts and his wife Janna are preparing to serve as missionaries for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Zambia.

ment authorization to even emerge from your apartment, pushed back rhetorically on the government’s handling of the crisis. French intelligence even detected the undercur-rent and issued a memo one week into the lockdown raising the fear of post-lockdown radi-calization of social movements.

Fear of revolt pressured the government to answer the call and shore up its resources so that it could contend with any potential resurgence of the virus without having to send us back into a general lock-down. Today, France is more confident and resilient than places like British Columbia and New Zealand, which are touted for having zero deaths — and which now can’t seem to accept anything less. Both seemingly willing to sacrifice the day-to-day lives of an entire population out of fear that even one person may die. They’ve backed themselves into a bubble that can’t be

maintained forever.By contrast, French

President Emmanuel Macron expedited the country’s unlocking back to near-normal last Sunday, after health experts had warned that an unlocking that was too slow now risked being more harm-ful than any potential health risk associated with it.

Today, French people are now freer than many Canadians because of citizens who pushed back against encroaching sanitary fascism. And France is barely any worse off now in terms of current COVID deaths, which have now plummeted everywhere in the developed world.

Here, elected officials are taking a visible back seat to public health officials, who are still give daily press confer-ences announcing no deaths — but with a warning that the situation risks changing. Yeah, and a giant earthquake also might cause the whole place to crumble into the Pacific Ocean tomorrow. People can’t be forced to stop living their lives for fear of risk.

It’s time for the technocrats to fade back into the back-

ground and for elected officials to do their jobs and open the place back up, already. The excuse given for why people are limited to short appoint-ments for the gym or swim-ming pool, but are permitted to gather to protest en masse, is that neighboring regions have more infections. So what? The death rate isn’t a problem any-more, so it’s time to get back to normal. Not the Orwellian “new normal” nonsense — but the old normal.

The whole idea of restric-tions was to make sure that people could get an intensive care bed if they needed one. Every country on earth has now had more than three months to ensure that stan-dard. It’s time to fully transfer risk management over to the citizens to make their own decisions about how to live their lives.

Rachel Marsden is a colum-nist, political strategist and host of an independently produced French-language program that airs on Sputnik France. Her website can be found at www.rachelmarsden.com.

Marsdencontinued from page A4

Notice is hereby given to qualified registered electors, that a primary election will be conducted in Tooele County

Tuesday, June 30, 2020

OFFICIAL NOTICE OF JUNE

PRIMARY ELECTION

BALLOT BOX LOCATIONSTooele County Building: in the alley behind the administration

buildingTooele City: next to the utility payment box on the south side of

the buildingGrantsville City: next to the utility payment box on the east side

of the buildingStansbury Park: next to the mailboxes in the Kraver’s parking lot

For a map showing the specific location of the ballot boxes, please go to: tooeleco.org/index.php/tooele-county-government/elected-officials/tooele-county-clerk/elections/

Questions: please go to vote.utah.gov or call the Clerk’s office at 435-843-3140

Marilyn K. Gillette, Tooele County Clerk

To help prevent the spread of the coronavirus, for the 2020 Regular Primary Election only:

• The election will be conducted primarily by mail;• Drop boxes will be available for depositing mail-in ballots until 8

p.m. on Election Day;• There will be no regular polling places for this election, but there

will be limited drive-up voting on Election Day in the parking lot behind the county building, unless the County Clerk cancels drive-up voting based on public health concerns;

• If drive-up voting is cancelled based on public health concerns, voters will be required to vote by mail;

• Except for drive-up voting on Election Day only, there will be no in person voting and no in person early voting;

• There will be no in person voter registration;• There will be no voter registration by provisional ballot; and• The voter registration deadline is June 19, 2020.

An individual with a disability who is not able to vote a manual ballot by mail may obtain information on voting in an accessible manner from the county’s website, by contacting the County Clerk, or by reviewing the information included with a ballot mailed to the voter.

MATTERS OF FAITH

Some reminders of the privileges and duties of libertyCharlie Roberts

GUEST COLUMNISTCharlie Roberts

HEALTH UPDATEWill an app keep you on your medication schedule?

The use of electronic apps (applications) downloaded to a smartphone or laptop has been revolutionizing the way we do many tasks, including staying healthy and socially connected. And a review of studies published online Jan. 30, 2020, by BMJ Open sug-gests that certain apps may also help you do a good job of staying on your medication schedule. Researchers combed through nine randomized controlled trials that included about 1,000 mostly middle-aged and older adults with chronic health conditions such as cardiovascular disease, depression, or Parkinson’s dis-ease. People who used apps to support them in taking medi-cations were twice as likely to report that they stuck to a medication regimen compared with people who didn’t use apps. The study doesn’t prove that apps are going to make people take their pills; the information in the study came from self-reported adherence, not objective measures like pill count or blood levels of drugs. But since these were random-ized trials, the results probably are valid. And apps can help in many ways: you can use medication apps not only to set reminders to take medications and log when you’ve had them, but also to look up potential drug interactions, renew pre-scriptions, identify pills, and even find cheaper drug prices.

Crank up your fiber intake to manage blood sugar and diabetes

Struggling with high blood sugar or diabetes? A study published online March 6, 2020, by PLOS Medicine sug-gests that increasing your daily fiber intake may help. British researchers combed through dozens of studies with about 10,000 participants who had prediabetes, gestational dia-betes, type 1 diabetes, or type

2 diabetes. Compared with people who ate low-fiber diets (19 grams of fiber per day), people who ate another 16 grams of fiber per day (a total of 35 grams per day) weighed less and had lower levels of blood sugar, cholesterol, and inflammation. There were also 14 fewer deaths per 1,000 people among those who ate high-fiber diets. If you’d like to increase your fiber intake, try to eat more fiber-rich foods at each meal. Good sources include whole-grain cere-als, legumes, and nuts. For example, a cup of bran cereal has up to 47 grams of fiber, depending on the brand; half a cup of white beans has about 10 grams of fiber; and an ounce of almonds has about 13 grams of fiber. Increase fiber intake slowly, to give your digestive tract time to adjust, and remember to increase your water intake as well.

Can hot baths protect your heart?

Taking a warm bath helps soothe aching joints, wash away stress, and promote sleep. Now, a study published online March 24, 2020, by the journal Heart suggests that

daily hot baths are also associ-ated with better heart health. Researchers analyzed self-reported health and lifestyle information from more than 30,000 middle-aged people in Japan. Participants responded to a questionnaire at the start of the study and were then followed for about 20 years. Compared with people who didn’t take a tub bath more than twice a week, people who took a daily warm or hot bath had a 28% lower risk of cardiovascular disease and a 26% lower risk of stroke. The study is only observational and doesn’t prove that daily tub bathing staves off heart prob-lems. But previous research has shown that the effects of tub bathing on the body are similar to those of exercise. Use caution, however: tak-ing baths in very hot water is also tied to sudden death due to overheating, confusion, or drowning. If you’re going to take a bath, keep the tempera-ture comfortable and don’t risk overheating. Finally, this study says nothing about the possible cardiovascular benefits of hot showers.

Copyright © 2020 by Harvard University.

A diet high in fiber may help with reducing high blood sugar or diabetes.

Your Complete Local News SourceTooele Transcript Bulletin Subscribe 435-882-0050

Page 6: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020

Rita G. Manchego

Our dear mother, grand-mother, sister, aunt and friend, Rita Manchego, left this earthly life to be reunited with her loved ones June 19, 2020. She was born Oct. 8, 1934, in Center, Colorado, to Lydia Torres. Her grandpa Torres, whom she loved and adored, helped raise her. Also, her step-father Max Martines stepped in and accepted her as his own.

She is survived by her sib-lings Max (Joan) Martinez, Frank (Aurora) Martinez, Lorraine (Larry) Archuletta and Elaine Martinez. She is also survived by her children Debbie (Richard) Merino, Diane (Frank) Harlan, Darrell Manchego and Douglas Manchego.

She was also blessed with 13 grandchildren, 34 great-grandchildren and nine great- great-grandchildren. She also had a best friend, Rose Griego, whom she was friends with since the 1st grade. They remained friends, more like sisters, until her passing Sept. 2019. Another special friend, since 1964, was Julia Romero. These two special ladies were considered our aunts while we were growing up.

Mom was a teacher’s aid in the Tooele School District for many years. Her love and compassion for her students was amazing. If ever a student was in need of shoes or a win-ter coat, she would provide them with their needs. She

had a very generous heart with whomever she knew and loved.

She was preceded in death by her loving husband of 65 years, Gilbert Manchego, and her mother and stepfather.

Mom and Dad used to love to go dancing. She enjoyed her trips to Wendover and just being with loved ones. She also had a love and interest in angels and now she walks amongst them.

A special thank you to her sister and our aunt Eliane who came from North Carolina to assist and care for her through some rough times. Also, spe-cial thank you to her nurses, Sharon and Patty, who took good care of her. A special thank you to her brothers- and sisters-in-law who also treated her like a real sister.

We will miss our mama for her loving soul, but are com-forted in knowing that she is in the loving care of her true father and loved ones. We all know she is dancing once again with her Silver Fox and surrounded by many angels.

Services are to be held at St. Marguerite Catholic Church on Friday, June 26, 2020. Rosary and viewing at 10:15 a.m. with a funeral mass at 11:30 a.m. Interment will follow at the Tooele City Cemetery. Due to the COVID pandemic, only family will be allowed at the funeral; however, we will have an open house at our mom’s house after the funeral.

Condolence cards can be mailed to Darrell Manchego at 336 E. Gordon Ln. J-4, Murray, UT 84107 or to Debbie Merino at PO Box 695, Tooele, UT 84074. Services entrusted with Didericksen Memorial.

A6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

* Savings amounts are averages based on information from The Hartford’s AARP Auto Insurance Program customers who became new auto insurance policyholders between 1/1/18 and 12/31/18 and provided data regarding their savings and prior carrier. Your savings may vary.** Based on customer experience reviews shared online at www.thehartford.com/aarp as of April 2019. *** The gift offer is good for � rst time responders who provide a valid email address. Responders will be sent an email to con� rm the gift. All responders in IA, IL, MA and RI who do not provide an email address are still eligible to receive the gift The gift offer is not available in GA, ND, NM or PA, but residents may still request a quote. The gift is available only as a limited time offer. Please allow 4-7 weeks for delivery. Bottle not included.† If you are age 50 or older, once you’re insured through this Program for ait least 60 days, you cannot be refused renewal as long as applicable premiums are paid when due. Also, you and other customary drivers of your vehicles must retain valid licenses, remain physically and mentally capable of operating an automobile (not applicable in MA), have no convictions for driving while intoxicated and must not have obtained your policy through material misrepresentation. Bene� t currently not available in HI, MI, NH, NC and TX.§§ Limitations apply. AARP and its af� iates are not insurers. Paid endorsement. The Hartford pays royalty fees to AARP for the use of its intellectual property. These fees are used for the general purposes of AARP. AARP membership is required for Program eligibility in most states. The AARP Automobile Insurance Program from The Hartford is underwritten by Hartford Fire Insurance Company and its af� iates, One Hartford Plaza, Hartford, CT 06155. It is underwritten in CA by Hartford Underwriters Insurance Company; in WA, by Hartford Casualty Insurance Company; in MN, by Sentinel Insurance Company; and in MA, MI and PA, by Trumbull Insurance Company. Speci� c features, credits, and discounts may vary and may not be available in all states in accordance with state � lings and applicable law. Applicants are individually underwritten and some may not qualify. The program is currently unavailable in Canada and U.S. Territories or possessions. 1In Texas, the Auto Program is underwritten by Southern County Mutual Insurance Company, through Hartford Fire General Agency. Hartford Fire Insurance Company and its affi liates are not fi nancially responsible for insurance products underwritten and issued by Southern County Mutual Insurance Company. 006131

No Clipping Required.

Saving is easy! With this policy, experienced drivers who switch save an average of $449*in the fi rst year alone — and they get all the benefi ts and privileges you’d expect with the AARP Auto Insurance Program from The Hartford. Your own savings could actually be greater.

The AARP® Auto Insurance Program from The Hartford.1

ON AUTO INSURANCE

GEICO, State Farm and Allstate

Call The Hartford1-855-738-9654

ON AVERAGE, AARP MEMBERS ENJOY

$449* SAVINGS

Your savings could be even more!

when they switch from companies like

Call The Hartford now to request a FREE money-saving quote.

1-855-738-9654No coupon necessary.

Not an AARP member? If you’re 50 or over, request a FREE quote and more information today!

■ 24/7 claims service■ Lifetime renewability†

■ Lock in your rate for a full 12 months■ New car replacement§§

The only national auto insurance program endorsed by AARP.

of customers recommend The Hartford**96%

FREE duffel bag when you request your free quote!***

for fi nding all our pets a good home.

for fi nding all

Brought to you by Joe H. Roundy, D.V.M.

Tooele Veterinary Clinic

Adoption ProcedureLocal shelter adoption requires vaccination payment, licensing

and possible shelter fee.

For more info. on animals-Tooele CountyAnimal Shelter 882-1051Tooele CityAnimal Shelter 882-8900GrantsvilleAnimal Shelter 884-6881

1182 N. 80 E., Tooele • 882-1051

Shelters are required to hold animals for 5 business days before euthanization.

PET OF THE WEEK

Headstone Clean& Restoration

LICENSED/BONDED & INSURED

BeforeBefore

AfterAfter

Call Susan435-830-8664

Get your Loved Ones on our books in time for Memorial Day

Cleaned/Polished/Protected and or Color Restoration

Tooele Transcript Bulletin Subscribe 435-882-0050

OBITUARIES

Shirley J. HammondShirley J. Hammond passed

away June 17, 2020, at the age of 92. She was born Nov. 18, 1927, to Clinton and Mariam (Hunter) Fulmer.

She married Melvin Don Hammond on Aug. 28, 1946. She was a Roy, Utah, resident for 65 years in the same home. She was a member of the Roy Senior Center for many years involved in ceramics. She loved playing cards with the ladies there. She loved to camp and golf.

Shirley was a mother of three: Brent, Diane, and Don; two grandchildren, Chad and Paul; two great-grandchildren, Spencer and Jamie.

She was preceded in death by her husband Melvin and two wonderful brothers, Keith and Donald (Bud) Fulmer.

A viewing will be held Tuesday, June 23, 2020, at Myers Mortuary, 5865 S. 1900 West, Roy, Utah, from 6 to 7

p.m. A graveside service will be held at the Tooele City Cemetery, on Wednesday, June 24, 2020, at 1 p.m.

Thank you to Casey and Mandy with Symbii Hospice. We are truly blessed for your friendship and care, you went beyond your call of duty.

Send condolences to the family at www.myers-mortu-ary.com.

Paul Isaac Mohammed1962 – 2020

Paul Isaac Mohammed, 58, devoted husband and father, beloved son, uncle, nephew and cousin, passed peace-fully June 9, 2020, in Phoenix, Arizona, surrounded by friends and family after relentlessly battling stage four cancer. Typical of Paul, he fought hard with strength and positivity, aided by outpouring love from his army of supporters until the very end.

Born in Tooele, Utah, Paul’s formative years were spent growing up in the remote town of Dugway, Utah, with a lifelong band of brotherhood friends. Paul and his brothers played on every high school sports team from softball to basketball to football, and Paul was the student body president his senior year. The foundation for Paul’s work ethic, leader-ship and love of sports came from his family upbringing in Dugway.

Paul went on to the University of Utah where he graduated with a bachelor of science in industrial engineer-ing and a master of business administration. He began his career in Salt Lake City, Utah, and married Connie Vanikiotis. Together they raised two great kids, Anthony and Adriana, a source of pride and the center of their lives. Paul’s work later moved the family to Phoenix, Arizona.

Whether coaching Little League Baseball, managing his son’s soccer team or being a hype man for his daughter’s cheerleading team, Paul was a dedicated, supportive father. The tenacity and old school toughness he lived by in his own sports he passed on to his kids. “Pops” was considered a second father by numerous kids whom he mentored and cherished. He cared about the kids, “kicking ass” if needed and building people up. The Mohammed household was

considered home by many.Paul was noted for his inspi-

rational leadership, voice of reason and humor. His teas-ing, straight shooting and genuine nature made him a man with many friends and a family favorite. He was a curious learner and reader, regularly sharing his knowl-edge with others. Paul enjoyed the outdoors and traveling, and especially took pleasure in hiking, whether it was in the desert terrain of Arizona or the alpine mountains of Alaska. A Utah Utes fan and a diehard Dodgers fan, family loved going to football and baseball games with him. Family mat-tered to Paul, and, being an avid photographer, he always had a camera in hand to cap-ture the memories.

Paul is survived by his wife Connie; children Anthony (Sydney) and Adriana; parents Abraham and Eva; siblings, Greg (Liz) and Joe (Kim); in-laws, Bill and Irene Vanikiotis; along with several aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces and nephews, all of whom he cared for deeply. He was preceded in death by his grandparents, uncle Joe, uncle Bobby, niece Alexis and others.

Paul chose to donate his body to aid others in advanc-ing science and medicine. Due to COVID-19 and concerns for the health of Paul’s many friends and family, a celebra-tion of life will be held at a later date and time in Salt Lake City.

Kay F. Rigby Kay F. Rigby, a member of

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, passed away from cancer June 22, 2020. He was born Dec. 9, 1933, in Fairview, Utah. He served in the U.S. Army for two years. He ended his 35 years of ser-vice with Tooele Army Depot as the chief of maintenance and alteration section.

Kay played for the Tooele Red Sox in the Amateur Baseball Federation. They were state champs in 1954 and then from 1957 to 1963, in his career. During a three year period he recorded 77 victories and six defeats while averaging 17 strikeouts per game.

He received various trophies from T.E.A.D. in softball, vol-leyball, basketball and for horseshoe pitching in his later years. He enjoyed deep-sea fishing, hunting and camp-ing, but the highlight was his scrolled wood art that he sold and received ribbons for at various arts and crafts ven-ues. Donating his work was a delight to him.

He was preceded in death by his parents Thomas and Elva Rigby, as well as seven broth-

ers and one sister. He is survived by a brother

Jay; a sister Norma; ex-wife Alta; sons Bob (Christine), David (Maribel), and Kelly (Susan); 14 grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchildren.

Thank you and God bless to Dr. Alma Parker and the staff of Canyon Care and Hospice.

A private family viewing will be held Didericksen Memorial in Grantsville. Graveside ser-vices and military honors will be held Thursday, June 25, at 11 a.m. at the Tooele City Cemetery. Social distancing encouraged.

This and other titles available at the Tooele

Transcript Bulletin

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELE

VALLEY OF THE SHADOWA MOTHER’S JOURNAL THROUGH HER CHILD’S BATTLE WITH CANCER

$10Only

LocalAuthor

58 N. Main – TooeleMon-Fri: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. • Sat-Sun: closed

“Mom, I’m having trouble swallowing.” With these

words from fourteen-year-old Jessica, the Clark family is

plunged into the frightening realm of cancer diagnosis and

treatment. The diagnosis is squamous cell esophageal cancer,

an adult cancer rarely seen in one so young. This painfully

honest account, written from a mother’s heart, describes the

roller coaster ride a family endures when a child is diagnosed

with cancer and battles courageously for seven years. It is the

true story about the faith of a child, the incredible skill and

caring of her physicians, and the sustaining power and Grace of

our great God.

daughter, Janelle, and then were soon blessed with two

“homemade” babies, Melissa and Jessica. Moving often to

follow her husband’s career, Linda has worn many hats,

including high school biology teacher, medical assistant,

hospital purchasing agent, ER admissions clerk, bookkeeper for

a lumbering/trucking company, coordinator of a school

program for gifted and talented students, administrative

assistant at a state hospital, medical transcriptionist, and

teleradiology QA specialist, as well as a volunteer emergency

medical technician for nineteen years, and volunteer firefighter

for seven years. In 1996, to further Alan’s career as a wildlife

biologist, the family made the move from Maine to Utah. Linda

and Alan are now retired and divide their time between homes

in Utah and Maine. They are currently raising a granddaughter.

Linda can be reached at [email protected].

V A L L E

Y O

F T H

E S

H A

D O

W L I N

D A

H O

V E S

T A

D T

C L A

R K

Third Edition

V A L L E Y

O F T H E

S H A D O W

A M O T H E R ’S J O U R N A L T H R O U G H H E R C H I L D ’S

B A T T L E W I T H C A N C E R

L I N D A H O V E S T A D T C L A R K

About the Author

Linda Hovestadt Clark grew up in Maine, graduating from the University of Maine with a degree in Biology. She married her college sweetheart, Alan, and nine

years later they adopted their first daughter

“Mom, I’m having trouble swallowing.” With these

words from fourteen-year-old Jessica, the Clark family is

plunged into the frightening realm of cancer diagnosis and

treatment. The diagnosis is squamous cell esophageal cancer,

an adult cancer rarely seen in one so young. This painfully

honest account, written from a mother’s heart, describes the

roller coaster ride a family endures when a child is diagnosed

with cancer and battles courageously for seven years. It is the

true story about the faith of a child, the incredible skill and

caring of her physicians, and the sustaining power and Grace of

our great God.

daughter, Janelle, and then were soon blessed with two

“homemade” babies, Melissa and Jessica. Moving often to

follow her husband’s career, Linda has worn many hats,

including high school biology teacher, medical assistant,

hospital purchasing agent, ER admissions clerk, bookkeeper for

a lumbering/trucking company, coordinator of a school

program for gifted and talented students, administrative

assistant at a state hospital, medical transcriptionist, and

teleradiology QA specialist, as well as a volunteer emergency

medical technician for nineteen years, and volunteer firefighter

for seven years. In 1996, to further Alan’s career as a wildlife

biologist, the family made the move from Maine to Utah. Linda

and Alan are now retired and divide their time between homes

in Utah and Maine. They are currently raising a granddaughter.

Linda can be reached at [email protected].

V A L L E

Y O

F T H

E S

H A

D O

W L I N

D A

H O

V E S

T A

D T

C L A

R K

Third Edition

V A L L E Y

O F T H E

S H A D O W

A M O T H E R ’S J O U R N A L T H R O U G H H E R C H I L D ’S

B A T T L E W I T H C A N C E R

L I N D A H O V E S T A D T C L A R K

About the Author

Linda Hovestadt Clark grew up in Maine, graduating from the University of Maine with a degree in Biology. She married her

college sweetheart, Alan, and nine

years later they adopted their first daughter

“Mom, I’m having trouble swallowing.” With these

words from fourteen-year-old Jessica, the Clark family is

plunged into the frightening realm of cancer diagnosis and

treatment. The diagnosis is squamous cell esophageal cancer,

an adult cancer rarely seen in one so young. This painfully

honest account, written from a mother’s heart, describes the

roller coaster ride a family endures when a child is diagnosed

with cancer and battles courageously for seven years. It is the

true story about the faith of a child, the incredible skill and

caring of her physicians, and the sustaining power and Grace of

our great God.

daughter, Janelle, and then were soon blessed with two

“homemade” babies, Melissa and Jessica. Moving often to

follow her husband’s career, Linda has worn many hats,

including high school biology teacher, medical assistant,

hospital purchasing agent, ER admissions clerk, bookkeeper for

a lumbering/trucking company, coordinator of a school

program for gifted and talented students, administrative

assistant at a state hospital, medical transcriptionist, and

teleradiology QA specialist, as well as a volunteer emergency

medical technician for nineteen years, and volunteer firefighter

for seven years. In 1996, to further Alan’s career as a wildlife

biologist, the family made the move from Maine to Utah. Linda

and Alan are now retired and divide their time between homes

in Utah and Maine. They are currently raising a granddaughter.

Linda can be reached at [email protected].

V A L L E

Y O

F T H

E S

H A

D O

W L I N

D A

H O

V E S

T A

D T

C L A

R K

Third Edition

V A L L E Y

O F T H E

S H A D O W

A M O T H E R ’S J O U R N A L T H R O U G H H E R C H I L D ’S

B A T T L E W I T H C A N C E R

L I N D A H O V E S T A D T C L A R K

About the Author

Linda Hovestadt Clark grew up in Maine, graduating from the University of Maine with a degree in Biology. She married her college sweetheart, Alan, and nine

years later they adopted their first daughter

“Mom, I’m having trouble swallowing.” With these

words from fourteen-year-old Jessica, the Clark family is

plunged into the frightening realm of cancer diagnosis and

treatment. The diagnosis is squamous cell esophageal cancer,

an adult cancer rarely seen in one so young. This painfully

honest account, written from a mother’s heart, describes the

roller coaster ride a family endures when a child is diagnosed

with cancer and battles courageously for seven years. It is the

true story about the faith of a child, the incredible skill and

caring of her physicians, and the sustaining power and Grace of

our great God.

daughter, Janelle, and then were soon blessed with two

“homemade” babies, Melissa and Jessica. Moving often to

follow her husband’s career, Linda has worn many hats,

including high school biology teacher, medical assistant,

hospital purchasing agent, ER admissions clerk, bookkeeper for

a lumbering/trucking company, coordinator of a school

program for gifted and talented students, administrative

assistant at a state hospital, medical transcriptionist, and

teleradiology QA specialist, as well as a volunteer emergency

medical technician for nineteen years, and volunteer firefighter

for seven years. In 1996, to further Alan’s career as a wildlife

biologist, the family made the move from Maine to Utah. Linda

and Alan are now retired and divide their time between homes

in Utah and Maine. They are currently raising a granddaughter.

Linda can be reached at [email protected].

V A L L E

Y O

F T H

E S

H A

D O

W L I N

D A

H O

V E S

T A

D T

C L A

R K

Third Edition

V A L L E Y

O F T H E

S H A D O W

A M O T H E R ’S J O U R N A L T H R O U G H H E R C H I L D ’S

B A T T L E W I T H C A N C E R

L I N D A H O V E S T A D T C L A R K

About the Author

Linda Hovestadt Clark grew up in Maine, graduating from the University of Maine with a degree in Biology. She married her

college sweetheart, Alan, and nine

years later they adopted their first daughter

“Mom, I’m having trouble swallowing.” With these

words from fourteen-year-old Jessica, the Clark family is

plunged into the frightening realm of cancer diagnosis and

treatment. The diagnosis is squamous cell esophageal cancer,

an adult cancer rarely seen in one so young. This painfully

honest account, written from a mother’s heart, describes the

roller coaster ride a family endures when a child is diagnosed

with cancer and battles courageously for seven years. It is the

true story about the faith of a child, the incredible skill and

caring of her physicians, and the sustaining power and Grace of

our great God.

daughter, Janelle, and then were soon blessed with two

“homemade” babies, Melissa and Jessica. Moving often to

follow her husband’s career, Linda has worn many hats,

including high school biology teacher, medical assistant,

hospital purchasing agent, ER admissions clerk, bookkeeper for

a lumbering/trucking company, coordinator of a school

program for gifted and talented students, administrative

assistant at a state hospital, medical transcriptionist, and

teleradiology QA specialist, as well as a volunteer emergency

medical technician for nineteen years, and volunteer firefighter

for seven years. In 1996, to further Alan’s career as a wildlife

biologist, the family made the move from Maine to Utah. Linda

and Alan are now retired and divide their time between homes

in Utah and Maine. They are currently raising a granddaughter.

Linda can be reached at [email protected].

V A L L E

Y O

F T H

E S

H A

D O

W L I N

D A

H O

V E S

T A

D T

C L A

R K

Third Edition

V A L L E Y

O F T H E

S H A D O W

A M O T H E R ’S J O U R N A L T H R O U G H H E R C H I L D ’S

B A T T L E W I T H C A N C E R

L I N D A H O V E S T A D T C L A R K

About the Author

Linda Hovestadt Clark grew up in Maine, graduating from the University of Maine with a degree in Biology. She married her

college sweetheart, Alan, and nine

years later they adopted their first daughter

“Mom, I’m having trouble swallowing.” With these words from fourteen-year-old Jessica, the Clark family is plunged into the frightening realm of cancer diagnosis and treatment. The diagnosis is squamous cell esophageal cancer, an adult cancer rarely seen in one so young. This painfully honest account, written from a mother’s heart, describes the roller coaster ride a family endures when a child is diagnosed with cancer and battles courageously for seven years. It is the true story about the faith of a child, the incredible skill and caring of her physicians, and the sustaining power and Grace of our great God.

Page 7: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020 A7TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

residents in 2019, had a net growth of zero, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Looking at long range growth, over the 10-year span from 2010 to 2019, the fastest growing town in Tooele County — by percentage — was also Vernon, with 107 new resi-dents for a 43% growth rate, not quite doubled in size.

Grantsville added 3,090 residents during that 10-year period for a 34.4% growth rate while Tooele City added 4,286 new citizens for a 13.5% growth rate.

While the Census Bureau report only identifies the estimated population of incor-porated cities, subtracting the total incorporated population from an earlier Census Bureau report of the estimated county population, an overall picture of unincorporated population growth can be determined.

The estimated population of unincorporated Tooele County was 15,071 in 2010. In 2019 that number grew by 6,088 — an average of 609 per year — to 21,159. Out of that 21,159, 1,226 were added in 2019.

The U.S. Census Bureau estimates population for years between the decennial census. The population estimates are as of July 1 of each [email protected]

would have to move.”Wimmer said he’s looking

at a requirement that sheriff’s employees live within a 50 mile radius from the Sheriff’s Office.

“That strikes a balance between distance and response time, as well as cost because deputies use their vehicle to commute,” Wimmer said.

The second resolution would have the County pickup the tab for a new employee contribu-tion for the public safety tier II retirement system.

The Legislature initially made changes in the Utah Retirement System in 2011, according to Wimmer.

At that time public safety employees could retire after 20 years with 50% of their aver-age highest three years of pay.

A new retirement system, called Tier II, was adopted for employees hired after 2011. It allowed public safety officers to retire after 25 years with 37.5% of their highest three years of pay, Wimmer said.

Recent changes by the state Legislature now make it pos-sible for Tier II public safety retirement employees to retire after 25 years, but with 50% of their highest three years of

pay. But the change came with a

price, according to Wimmer.There is a 2.27% of the

employee’s salary cost that the state Legislature allows the county to pass on to the employee or the county may cover the cost, according to Wimmer.

Wimmer wants the County to cover the cost.

“Talking it over with HR, it looks like 90% of cities and counties will be picking up the cost,” Wimmer said. “We would be the odd man out.”

The additional cost to the employee would become a recruiting issue as some of the Sheriff’s nearest recruiting competitors, including some agencies in Tooele County, have already decided to pick up the extra cost for their pub-lic safety employees, according to Wimmer.

While he did not say he opposed the county picking up the extra cost, Commission Chairman Tom Tripp pointed out that he is aware that many taxpayers have to make a con-tribution to their retirement plans.

Commissioner Kendall Tomas asked Wimmer if his department was fully staffed.

The answer from Wimmer was a qualified “yes.”

Wimmer said the depart-ment started the year down six

road deputies.“It has taken this long to

build that back up,” he said. “But we filled our last position with somebody from the jail. So on paper we are full.”

This was the first reading for both resolutions. The County Commission may review and vote on the resolutions at their next regular meeting.

“We are in a time when many deputies are struggling to find a reason to do their job,” Wimmer said. “I feel very passionate about doing this for them.”[email protected]

Sheriffcontinued from page A1

the well.City officials are asking indi-

viduals with any information to call dispatch at 435-882-5600 or the police station at 435-882-8900

“Because of the seriousness of breaking into a water sys-tem, the federal government and the state, as well as the city will prosecute,” Winn said. “If anyone sees anything that is not right, we want them to report it, but we are grateful we are back on line and safe.”[email protected]

Tankcontinued from page A1

epidemiologist, warned that the state is getting to a point where the only viable option to manage spread and deaths will be a complete shutdown.

Gov. Gary Herbert took to Twitter to address the memo and his thoughts regarding the virus.

“Dr. Dunn’s internal memo raises alarm about the increas-ing COVID-19 cases in Utah,” he tweeted. “I appreciate her

analysis and share many of her concerns. We will work to stem this tide, but I have no plans to shut down Utah’s economy.”

Herbert also emphasized, “Our plan will only be as suc-cessful as the willingness of people to protect themselves and their loved ones from the spread of the virus by follow-ing our common sense guide-lines for social distancing, good hand hygiene and especially the use of face coverings.”

Herbert also released a statement regarding face-masks. In the statement he said masks serve as a simple

action to protect the health of individuals in the state.

“During the coming days and months, it will remain critical for everyone to wear masks,” said Herbert. “Of course, the habit of wearing a face mask when out in public is not always easy to remember, and all of us are still working to remember to implement these best practices. We hope that all Utahns understand the importance of wearing a mask, and will be diligent in their efforts to wear one.”[email protected]

Casescontinued from page A1

Birch Family Pharmacy

Birch Family Pharmacy

STANSBURY6727 N. Hwy 36

882.8880

GRANTSVILLE213 E. Main St.

884.9990

TOOELE493 N. Main St.

882.7775

www.birchfamilyrx.com

is committed to serving the community and intends to stay available for our patients’

needs throughout this challenging time.

Thank you for your patience and continued support at this time!

As always, our main priority is to keep patients and staff healthy and safe. You may see changes at each of our stores as we work towards that.

Please consider our available services to assist with social distancing:Drive Thru · All Day Deliveries · Automatic Refills

www.tooeleeducationfoundation.org

By Clint Spindler

In spite of the countless challenges everyone has faced due to the COVID-19 crisis, Tooele Education Foundation has been fortunate to enjoy overwhelming levels of support from our community. We have been successful generating resources for a multitude of education-related projects and programs, and appreciation services for teachers and school staffs.

Thanks to generous donations by Tooele County School District employees, through the employee contribution initiative, TEF has developed an ongoing funding source. This assists in providing school and district staff with culture/climate grants, and providing TEF with a means to help itself in unrestricted ways.

In a little over a year and a half, we are happy to report that more than 400 teachers, administrators, and various school district employees have elected to participate in this payroll deduction program. Without this generous employee support, TEF would not be able facilitate this dual purpose grants program. We are very prudent, conservative, and always comply with our policies governing the use of these precious funds.

At the present time, donations have been approved in ways that enrich and enhance learning throughout the school district, allow minor enhancements to communications, provide TEF with modest assistance for emergency help or special project needs. Grants given during the 2019-2020 school year totaled more than $20,000.00 and include, but are

not limited to:• Read To Me - Early

Literacy Program (Sterling)• Chromebooks for Financial

Literacy Class (Tooele High)• Turkey Trot Wellness

Activity (All District Employees)

• TCSD Secretaries Recognition Luncheon (All School & District Secretaries)

• PBIS School Champions of the Month Recognition (All Schools)

• Reading Intervention Listening Center (West)

• Special Needs Transition Recognition (Special Education)

• Special Education Career Job Fair for Students (District-Wide)

• Rotary Club Dictionary Project (All 3rd Grade Students)

• Eagle Hour Club (Sterling)• Transportation to Holiday

Nutcracker Performance (Willow)

• Transportation to Holiday Nutcracker Performance (Stansbury Park)

• TCSD PBIS Summit Prizes

(District-Wide)• Mr. & Miss Super Amazing

Pageant (Tooele High)• Arts & Science Camp

(Grantsville & Willow)• STEM Club (Stansbury

High)• Outdoor Survival

(Grantsville Jr. High)• Unrestricted Culture/

Climate Grant (All TCSD Schools)

As this program expands and grows, we thank you and encourage you to continue donating to this highly worthwhile program. We look forward to helping your school and students in even more beneficial ways.

All of this good work is possible due to the unwavering support for TEF and its programming! THANK YOU....TCSD EMPLOYEES!!

Tooele EducationF O U N D A T I O NS E R V I N G T O O E L E C O U N T Y S C H O O L S

TEF Support & Culture/Climate Grants

Tooele Education Foundation

@TEFbellringer

Linda Clegg (TEF) presents a donation to Laurie Paige (teacher) and Jon Marble (principal) in support of Sterling Elementary’s Eagle Hour Clubs.

U.S. Census Bureau Population Estimates 2010 2018 2019

Grantsville 8,974 11,599 12,064

Rush Valley 442 493 494

Stockton 634 682 682

Tooele City 31,729 35,290 36,015

Vernon 249 339 356

Wendover 1,403 1,471 1,489

Unincorporated Tooele County 15,071 20,115 21,159

County Total 58,502 69,989 72,259

Growthcontinued from page A1

@TooeleTB

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELE

Follow us on Facebook!

Subscribe Today435-882-0050

FILE PHOTO

Tooele County Sheriff Paul Wimmer gives the oath during a swearing-in ceremony for six new officers in November 2016.

Page 8: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020A8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

SPECIAL DELIVERY

ONLINE

Go to: TooeleOnline.com

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTTOOELE

Get this edition online! It’s easy to use and allows to read your Tooele Transcript-Bulletin from anywhere with internet access. And you can browse through 10 years of archives!

Whether you’re using your desktop computer, laptop, smart phone, or tablet you can view the pages of the paper like it’s the real thing!

Includes print edtion if subscriber lives

within delivery areas.

$40PERYEAR!Only

Over 100 Issues!

FREE for Print

Subscribers

Not a Subscriber?

Page 9: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020 A9TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

DARREN VAUGHANSPORTS EDITOR

The Tooele baseball team began the American Legion season earlier this month with a four-game winning streak, showing the confidence and swagger befitting a team that was among the favorites to win a region championship this spring.

However, the Buffaloes’ momentum has faded, and frustration has bubbled to the surface in the midst of a mid-season swoon. Tooele lost for the fourth time in five games Thursday night at Bountiful High School, falling to the Bountiful Tribe 11-1 in six innings.

“We’ve just hit a slump, and we’ll see if the boys can figure it out,” Tooele coach Nolan Stouder said. “There’s not much rah-rahing I can do to turn it around.”

It was a rough evening all around for the Buffs, who allowed seven runs in the first inning — five of which were unearned — and never recov-ered. Tooele nearly escaped the opening frame trailing just 2-0 after an RBI single and a passed ball allowed the Tribe to score, but then the trouble began. Starting pitcher Jake Hervat hit a Bountiful batter with two outs and a runner on base, and a Tooele error kept the inning alive and led to a run. Two more walks, a passed ball, an error and an RBI dou-ble to right drove in a pair of additional runs.

“Hopefully, they get their minds right,” Stouder said, noting the frustration some of his players felt after the game. “That’s my biggest worry — my catcher (Connor Spindler) is down on himself, my great lefty pitcher (Hervat) is down on himself, our shortstop (Camden Colovich) is down on himself defensively, but you’ve got to believe in yourself. You’ve got to be humble, but you’ve got to believe you’re the best player on the field.”

Meanwhile, the Buffs’ offense was stuck in neutral. Spindler walked to lead off the second inning, but courtesy

runner Zander Adams was stranded on first base when the next three batters were retired in order. In the third inning, Joseph Tippetts hit a leadoff single, but was retired on Austin Avery’s double play-inducing groundball to the shortstop. Bryson Byrd walked with two outs but Dillon Palmer flied out to right to end the frame.

It wasn’t until Tooele trailed 8-0 in the top of the fourth inning that the Buffs finally got on the board. Brett Porthan led off with a single and came in to score on Mason Donadio’s two-out single up the middle. However, the Buffaloes didn’t build on that momentum, as the Tribe tacked on two more runs in the bottom of the fourth inning to extend the lead to 10-1. Tooele stranded two more runners in scoring position, as Avery hit a leadoff double in the fifth inning and Hervat reached on an error and advanced to second on Donadio’s single in the sixth.

Bountiful ended the game via the 10-run mercy rule in the bottom of the sixth, as a bobbled ball in the outfield allowed a Tribe runner to score from second.

Hervat took the loss, allow-ing 10 runs — five earned — on eight hits, four walks and a hit batter in four innings. Relief pitcher Brock Beer gave up one unearned run on three hits in 1 2/3 innings. Donadio finished 2-for-3 at the plate with an RBI for the Buffs, while Avery’s fifth-inning double was the only one of Tooele’s five hits to go for extra bases.

Tooele will play host to county rival Stansbury on Wednesday at 6 p.m. at Dow James Memorial [email protected]

Cowboys build momentum in summer ballSPORTS

MARK WATSONCORRESPONDENT

Grantsville is starting to prevail in battles against Class 5A and 6A competition in Salt Lake County’s summer baseball league.

The Cowboys swept a doubleheader Friday on the road against 6A powerhouse Herriman, and nearly toppled 5A Olympus at home Monday

night.After seven complete

innings, Monday’s game ended in a 7-7 tie with darkness pre-venting the contest from going extra innings.

Grantsville jumped out to a 4-1 lead after the first inning and watched the visitors chip away to tie the game 4-4 with a run in the third and two more in the fourth.

Grantsville jumped back on top with three runs in its half of the fourth inning to stretch the lead to 7-4, but the Titans scored twice in the fifth inning and tied the game with another run in the top of the seventh.

Kaden Lund started on the mound for the Cowboys and struck out two batters in the first inning. Olympus scored an unearned run in the opening frame to take a 1-0 lead.

“We played well tonight, but a couple of errors in the first few innings hurt us,” said Grantsville coach Aaron Perkins.

Lund did himself a big favor in the bottom of the first when he stepped to the plate with the bases loaded and pounded the ball deep over the left fielder’s head for a double and three runs batted in. Grantsville added a third run to lead 4-1 after just one inning.

Later on with the game tied at 4-4, Grantsville came through with more run pro-duction in the bottom of the fourth.

Caleb Sullivan smacked a single and Easton Cooper was hit by a pitch. Both runners advanced on stolen bases, and Tyson Hainke followed with an RBI single to left. Two more

runners scored when Josh Staley ripped a hit to the right-center field gap and Grantsville led 7-4 after four innings.

Lund ended up pitching 3 ⅔ innings and Hainke came on in relief in the fourth.

Olympus brought on its own relief pitcher in the fourth and he was able to shut out the Cowboys the rest of the game. Grantsville had a runner at third in the fourth, but the Oly reliever struckout two con-secutive batters to leave him

stranded.Down 7-4, Olympus scored

twice in the fifth to slice the lead to 7-6.

Grantsville put two runners on in the fifth with one out, but a pop out and strikeout ended the inning.

A single and stolen base with two outs gave Olympus an opportunity to tie the game in the sixth, but Staley came on to pitch in relief and got the third out with strikeout.

Olympus was able to tie the

game in the seventh with a pair of singles and a Grantsville error in the outfield.

Deadlocked at 7-7, the Cowboys managed to get a runner on in the bottom of the seventh, but a fly out to cen-ter and a strikeout ended the inning.

Grantsville will face Cyprus on the road at 7:45 p.m. Wednesday, with another game against Murray on [email protected]

CLAYTON DUNN/ TTB PHOTO

Grantsville’s starting pitcher Kaden Lund delivers a pitch during Monday’s game.

CLAYTON DUNN/TTB PHOTO

A Granstville runner slides underneath the tag of the Olympus catcher to score a run during Monday’s game.

Buffs hit rough patch in summer seasonTooele’s struggles continue in loss to Bountiful

@TooeleTB

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELEFollow us on Facebook!

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

Subscribe 435-882-0050

Delivering the News in Tooele County for More Than 120 Years

Page 10: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020A10 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

DEAR PAW’S CORNER: In a private Facebook group I belong to, someone is offer-ing a pet for adoption, saying it belonged to their recently deceased mother-in-law. They want a $650 fee for “rehom-ing” the pet, because they say it has AKC registration. Is this a legitimate fee? It seems awfully steep. — James in Burlington, Vermont

DEAR JAMES: Rehoming fees are a fact of life for pri-vate pet placements, but $650

to simply adopt a pet is unrea-sonably steep.

That isn’t to say that rehoming fees are a bad thing. A reasonable rehoming fee can prevent a pet from being adopted by people with bad intentions, who can’t finan-cially care for a pet, or who are impulsively adopting a cute little dog that they might abandon at the first hiccup in behavior.

The flip side is someone abusing the rehoming fee for personal profit. That person may claim that the fee offsets their costs of caring for the pet, but when the rehoming fee far outstrips the cost of adopting from a shelter, it’s time to proceed with caution.

Find out what the local shelter charges to adopt a pet and ask online what average rehoming fees are for your

area. If you’re interested in the dog, contact the offerer and find out as many details as possible about its breed, temperament, health and the environment it lives in. Do not send any money beforehand. You need to meet both them and the dog in person, and no money should change hands until both sides agree (in writ-ing, ideally) to the rehoming.

Further, if they are truly concerned for the dog’s wel-fare, they will have questions for you — maybe even an application — to make sure you are genuinely adopting the dog and will be a good owner.

Send your comments, tips or questions to [email protected].

© 2020 King Features Synd., Inc.

1. ASTRONOMY: How often does the Sun rotate on its axis?

2. GEOGRAPHY: What is the state capital of Delaware?

3. GOVERNMENT: Which amendment to the U.S. Constitution limits presi-dents to two terms in office?

4. HISTORY: What was the highest social class in the early Roman empire?

5. ENTERTAINERS: Which

20th-century actress was born with the name Lucille LeSueur?

6. TELEVISION: What were the names of Elly May’s two pet chimpanzees in “The Beverly Hillbillies”?

7. ART: Which artist painted “The Persistence of Memory”?

8. MOVIES: What kind of gun did Clint Eastwood carry in the “Dirty Harry” series?

9. MUSIC: Which singer-songwriter’s nickname was “The Lizard King”?

10. FOOD & DRINK: What is the most expensive spice on earth?

➤ On July 9, 1877, the All England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club begins its first lawn tennis tournament at Wimbledon, then an outer-suburb of London. Twenty-one amateurs showed up to compete in the Gentlemen's Singles tournament, the only event at the first Wimbledon. The winner was to take home a 25-guinea trophy.

➤ On July 10, 1887, a dam breaks in Zug, Switzerland, killing 70 people. The resulting wall of water was so powerful that rescue boats were ineffective, as they capsized in the roiling waters.

➤ On July 7, 1917, Britain establishes the British Women's Auxiliary Army Corps (WAAC), authorizing female volunteers to serve alongside their male counterparts in France during World War I. Some 80,000 women enlisted to perform labors such as cookery, mechanical and clerical work, and other tasks.

➤ On July 6, 1944, in Hartford, Connecticut, a fire breaks out under the big top of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum Bailey Circus, killing 167 people and injuring 682. An investigation revealed that the tent had been treated with flammable paraffin thinned with three parts of gasoline to make it waterproof.

➤ On July 8, 1959, Maj. Dale Buis and Master Sgt. Chester Ovnand become the first Americans killed in the U.S. phase of the Vietnam War when guerrillas strike a Military Assistance Advisory Group compound in Saigon.

➤ On July 11, 1979, parts of Skylab, America's first space station, come crashing down on Australia and into the Indian Ocean five years after the last manned Skylab mission ended. Skylab weighed 77 tons.

➤ On July 12, 1995, a heat advisory is issued in Chicago, warning of an impending record-breaking heat wave. When the heat broke a week later, nearly 1,000 people were dead in Illinois and Wisconsin. The temperature in the city hit 106 F with a heat index of 120 F.

© 2020 King Features Synd.

The hisTory Channel

Momentsin Time

by FifiRodriguez

Mega Maze

ALL PUZZLE ANSWERS BELOW

ANSWERS

1. On average, every 27 days

2. Dover3. 22nd4. Patricians5. Joan Crawford6. Skipper and Bessie

7. Salvador Dali8. .44 Magnum Smith

& Wesson Model 29 9. Jim Morrison10. Saffron

© 2020 King Features Synd., Inc.

Trivia Test Answers

Q: Christian Slater is one of my favorite actors from the ‘80s. I loved him in “Heathers.” Does he have any new projects coming out once the pandemic is over? -– C.U.

A: Slater, who looks fan-tastic at 50, had his first role in the daytime drama “Search for Tomorrow” before he was even a teen. His father, Michael Hawkins, also acted on soaps (“Ryan’s Hope), and his mother, Mary Jo Slater, was a casting director. The first time I remember hear-ing Christian Slater’s name was in 1989 when he starred as a skateboarder in the film “Gleaming the Cube,” but it wasn’t until later that same

year in the movie “Heathers,” where he channeled a young Jack Nicholson, that his stock soared.

While he’s been gainfully employed for more than 30 years now, his career has had its ups and downs. Fortunately, it’s been on the upswing for the past five years, resulting in a Golden Globe win for his role in the critically acclaimed series “Mr. Robot.”

Also, you don’t have to wait until after the pandemic to see him in something new. He’s currently starring in the second season of the anthol-ogy series “Dirty John” on the USA Network, which is based on the true crime story of Betty Broderick.

• • •Q: I was so sad to hear that

Andy Cohen had to find his dog a new home. Did he take him to a shelter? — B.S.

A: Producer and talk-show host (“Watch What Happens Live” on Bravo) Andy Cohen recently made the tough deci-

sion to rehome his dog, Wacha, but it’s a place the beagle mix knows well — a residence in Connecticut where he stayed when Cohen vacationed.

Fans know Wacha well from his visits to Andy’s talk show set and Instagram page, but he did have a reputation for being a bit unpredictable. (He reportedly nipped at pal Anderson Cooper one time). After Andy’s son Benjamin was born, Wacha seemed to be adjusting well to the change, but apparently some-thing happened recently where dog behavior experts told Cohen it would be best to rehome his four-legged friend.

Cohen recently visited Wacha at his new home and took him for a walk. His new owner stated

that Wacha is doing great, and Cohen plans on visiting on a regular basis.

• • •Q: I love the musical comedy

“Perfect Harmony,” but a friend of mine heard that it’s been canceled. Is there not going to be a second season? — P.A.

A: We could use some more

uplifting shows right about now, but unfortunately “Perfect Harmony” isn’t going to be one of them. The NBC comedy about a small-town choir star-ring the always terrific Bradley Whitford (“West Wing”) and Anna Camp (“Pitch Perfect”) just wasn’t music to everyone’s ears, averaging less than 2 mil-

lion viewers per week, which is small for net-work television. NBC also canceled another freshman series, “Lincoln Rhyme,” star-ring Russell Hornsby as a serial killer pro-filer.

Send me your questions at [email protected], or write me at KFWS, 628 Virginia Drive, Orlando, FL 32803.

© 2020 King Features Synd.

Christian Slater

Iron doorstops became a hot collectible with rising prices

about 1990. A 1985 book pic-turing doorstops and several auctions, which included rare doorstops, sent collectors searching for examples of the 1930s and ‘40s collectible. They became so popular that thousands of copies were made, many from the original molds. Bright new paint iden-tifies many recent doorstops, but some, with artificial wear and tear, are good enough to fool collectors today. It is almost impossible to break an iron figure, so many iron doorstops still are available with little damage. Top prices are paid for doorstops in great condition with almost all of the original paint. And, of course, rarity adds value.

This original Uncle Sam doorstop has the words “For the Open Door” on the base. The words “For the Open Door” had a political mean-ing, and it was not just a statement about how the doorstop was used. A compli-cated “Open Door” policy was promoted by the U.S. in 1899. It suggested that all countries should allow China and other countries to trade with no tar-iffs, no special harbor charg-es, and with no interference or attempts to divide China. There was another Open Door political discussion in 1922, and this discussion probably is the one mentioned on the doorstop. China opened spe-

cial investment zones in 1928. There were more internation-al discussions and changes in 1978 concerned with China’s industry, trade and foreign investment.

The Uncle Sam doorstop is rare and desirable, and this one, with great paint, sold several years ago at a Bertoia Auction for $21,240. The 1985 value was $250.© 2020 King Features Synd., Inc.

Are high rehoming fees legitimate?

Something On Your Mind?

Write a Letter to the Editor!

Tooele Transcript BulletinP.O. Box 390

Tooele, UT 84074

[email protected]

Subscribe 435-882-0050

This Uncle Sam doorstop sold for $21,240 in a New Jersey auc-tion. It was listed as worth $250 in 1985. Vintage doorstops have all gone up in value, especially those with the original paint.

Page 11: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020 A11TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

A tough old cowboy reminds us of the power of perseverance“My uncle is eighty-years

old and he is still the toughest guy I know!” Donetta Anderson vivaciously said. Then, she went on to paint a vivid picture of this classic cowboy relative, still living and working on his ranch in Idaho.

“One day he was rounding up a big bull while partnering with his trusted horse, when all of a sudden the bit broke, causing an abrupt change of pressure in the horse’s mouth. This caused the horse to rear, throwing my uncle to the ground where he lost his hat

and hit his head.”His twelve-year-old grand-

son, who was working with his beloved grandfather, walked apprehensively toward his grandpa’s seemingly-lifeless body. Being of a young age and with limited experi-ence he was unsure of what to do.

“Grandpa?,” he whispered

hoarsely, with fear and expec-tation.

Seconds later, Grandpa’s eyes popped open and the old cowboy said, “Get me back on that horse.”

Donetta’s eyes brightened before she said, “They don’t make men like that anymore.”

And oh, Grandpa told his grandson to simply take him home so he could rest after they got the pull put safely in the corral.

Upon returning to his own home, the boy told his dad what had happened and how he was worried whether he

had done the right thing by leaving the old cowboy alone. That’s when the boy’s father went to Grandpa’s house, the home where he grew up, to check on him.

“I’m just going to hole-up here until I heal,” Grandpa said.

His son, of course, took him to the hospital where he was diagnosed with broken ribs and a concussion. In caring fashion, the son took his aged father home so he and his family could care for him until he was well and strong again.

“Sometimes we forget how

strong our familial stock was and is,” Donetta said with a smile.

We all come from such good and tough ancestry. Yet, it’s easy for us to forget about the well-earned magnificence of the tough people who birthed us, as we struggle to navigate the challenges that naturally occur while going about our lives. At times, it may feel as if we’re going through things that no others have ever struggled through. So, the real-life tale of an iconic old cowboy, a tough old bird, is just what we need

to be reminded that such a person is more than a repre-sentation of the Old West; he is a living symbol of whence we came and the strength we have deep within our souls.

And, by the way, some-times all of us, no matter how tough, can enjoy the loving, caring and compas-sionate grace of those dear to us, so we can “get back on that horse” after we’ve been knocked down to the ground.

Lynn Butterfield lives in Erda and is a managing broker for a real estate company.

MONDAY’S WARM COCOA

When peaceful protests and a pandemic collideOn Sunday, September

15, 1963, the 16th Street Church is Birmingham, Alabama, was bombed. The church, whose congregation was predominantly black, was also where civil rights lead-ers regularly met. Four young girls were killed. Their names are Addie Mae Collins (14), Cynthia Wesley (14), Carole Robertson (14), and Denise McNair (11). Several others were injured.

Dudley Randall’s poem “Ballad of Birmingham” refer-ences the church bombing. In it, a young girl pleads with her mother to allow her to “march the streets of Birmingham/ In a Freedom March today?”

Concerned for her daugh-ter’s safety, the mother refuses her request: “’No, baby, no, you may not go/ For I fear those guns will fire. But you may go to the church instead/ And sing in the children’s choir.’”

The mother hears the explo-sion, rushes to the church, “claws through the bits of glass and brick,/ Then lifted out a shoe.” The mother’s closing lament is heart wrenching: “’O, here’s the shoe my baby wore,/ But baby where are you now?’”

Today, we find ourselves in the midst of a pandemic where early data suggests black com-munities are suffering from COVID-19 at a disproportion-ate rate. “Social conditions, structural racism, and other factors elevate risk for COVID-19 diagnoses and deaths in black communities,” concluded the writers of “Assessing Differential Impacts of COVID-19 on Black Communities,”

in an article in Annals of Epidemiology.

As coronavirus lingers, peaceful protestors have taken to the streets to protest the rac-ist murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery and other black Americans. Many protestors face the decision of peace-fully protesting injustice while recognizing that by being in such close proximity to other protestors they could be put-ting themselves and others at risk of catching or spreading the virus.

They also face the risk of a peaceful protest turning vio-lent. And once again parents find themselves being asked by their children for permission to march the streets in spite of the risks.

“’But,mother, I won’t be alone’,” said the girl in Randall’s poem. “’Other children will go with me,/ And march the streets of Birmingham/ To make our country free.’”

It wasn’t until 2000 that charges were brought against two of the white men long suspected of being responsible for bombing the 16th Street Church. Each eventually was convicted and sentenced to life in prison.

Certainly, parents should worry about the safety of their

children. That’s the right thing to do.

But parents should also recognize that there are some injustices that are impossible to isolate to one particular set-ting. A church, a parked car, or an apartment may be no safer than a protest march for some black Americans. For some parents, it can seem impossible to keep their children, regard-less of their age, safe.

It is reasonable to decide not to engage in peaceful protests out of concern of contracting or spreading coronavirus. For those who choose not to pro-test peacefully, however, there remains substantial work to do to combat racism, to be anti-racist. Doing nothing or hop-ing to find a safe haven where racist behavior doesn’t exist is not a viable option. Calling out racist behavior among family, friends, classmates, or colleagues when it occurs is a start. But it will take actions rather than merely words “to make our country free.”

Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of “The Simple Art of Business Etiquette: How to Rise to the Top by Playing Nice,” is a senior lecturer in public policy and director of the communications program at Harvard’s Kennedy School. He is also the adminis-trator of www.jeffreyseglin.com, a blog focused on ethical issues. Do you have ethical questions that you need answered? Send them to [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @jseglin.

© 2020 Jeffrey L. Seglin

THE RIGHT THING

CONTRACTORS CONTRACTORS

CONTRACTORS

SERVICE DIRECTORYPLACE YOUR AD HERE

CALL 435.882.0050TRANSCRIPT

BULLETINTOOELE

801.506.6881WhippleServiceChampions.com

For all your Plumbing, Heating, A/C,Electrical, and Drain Cleaning Needs.

A local, friendly, family-owned business since 1947, with safe, clean-cut, drug-tested, background-checked

technicians who won’t leave a mess!

For all your Plumbing, Heating, A/C,Electrical, and Drain Cleaning Needs.

A local, friendly, family-owned business since 1947, with safe, clean-cut, drug-tested, background-checked

technicians who won’t leave a mess!

9X BEST OF STATE WINNER9X BEST OF STATE WINNER

Grow Your Business with Your Own

Service Directory AdCall 435.882.0050

or visit58 N. Main Street, Tooele

8:30 to 5:30, Monday-Friday

Tooele Transcript Bulletin

Reach Thousands!

• Increase your property value by Repairing & Preparing the Right Way.

• Don’t lose Money/Time on things that don’t give you a return.

Let Me Sell Your Home!Call Shane 435-840-0344

Home SALES & Home REPAIRS Expert

[email protected]

Lynn Butterfi eldGUEST COLUMNIST

Lynn Butterfi eld

Jeffrey L. SeglinGUEST COLUMNIST

Jeffrey L. Seglin

Explore the Colorful History of Tooele CountyTooele County features some of the most

dramatic and diverse landforms on Earth. There are 11,000 foot-high peaks, an inland sea, verdant valleys, and a mysterious desert with a bizarre expanse of white salt. The only people who knew about the place were the Native Americans who lived there, and a few white explorers during the early 1800s. But that all changed in September 1846. That year the Donner-Reed Party, while trying a shortcut to California, passed through the county and nearly perished in the Great Salt Lake Desert. Three years later, a handful of Mormon pioneer families left Salt Lake Valley and built a

meager encampment in Settlement Canyon above today’s Tooele City. Soon, others followed, and a community emerged on the edge of the Great Basin frontier that was populated by individualistic and energetic settlers who managed to thrive in an environment fraught with hardship. Their story, and many others, are found inside this History of Utah’s Tooele County. Learn about how the pioneers ingeniously built their lives in the wilderness; the wild mining days in Ophir, Mercur and Jacob City; the Pony Express Trail; the glorious beaches and resorts along the southern shore of the Great Salt Lake, and more.

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

Get Your Copy Today at the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin

$3995• Nearly 500 pages• Large 8.5 x 11 size pages• Hardcover with dust jacket• More than 500 photos• More than 700 pioneer biographies

58 N. Main • TooeleMon.-Fri. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed Sat. and Sun.

@TooeleTB

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELE

Follow us on Facebook!

Page 12: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020A12 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

THURSDAYJUNE 25 • 6:00JUNE 25 • 6:00PMPM

GATE OPENS 5:30PM • CONCERT STARTS 7:00PM

DOUBLE FEATURE MOVIE TO FOLLOW

Motor Vu Theater, 4055 SR-36, Erda

COME JOIN CHAD HYMAS & COUNTRY STAR CHARLEY JENKINS THIS

Dinner, raffle, double feature and music concert included. $150 per car. Please call in advance for your ticket. Marlee Dalton 435-830-0150. All proceeds are going to organ donation. Please see her story below!

Bring your family for a night of fun, food and festivities. If you haven’t had an Erda burger... it’s definitely a bucket list experience!

“Yes” Utah Donor Registry for organ, eye, and tissue donation.

Emcee Chad Hymas, A Country Concert by Charley Jenkins, a Double feature movie at Motor Vu drive In (Field Of Dreams & Always), all the food you can handle plus plenty of treats and a raffle. $150 per car.

Ten years ago, Marlee Dalton was on the national organ transplant waiting list. She needed a kidney and pancreas, but there are not enough organs for everyone who is in need. Marlee didn’t know when, or even if, she would get that call letting her know there was a kidney and pancreas available for her.

In another town, a young man was preparing for his senior year of high school. He had made the decision to be an

organ donor in case the unexpected happened.Marlee will never forget the day when their lives became connected. She received a lifesaving transplant, but she also knew a family was grieving. She determined that she would find a way to educate others about donation and help her community in honor of her donor. She began organizing a softball tournament each June to raise awareness about donation. The proceeds from that event helped fund two scholarships and donation education. This year, because of COVID-19, Marlee will not be able to hold her softball tournament, but she is not about to be sidelined. She started looking for ways to raise money and awareness without the softball tournament and came up with the great idea to hold an event at the Motor-Vu drive-in theater in Erda, Utah.

Charley Jenkins, is a rising country music singer whose roots are in Utah. After visiting a friend who needed a heart transplant several years ago, Charley began working on a song he titled “That Mountain.”

Currently in the United States, there are over 110,000

people waiting for a lifesaving transplant. To learn more about organ, eye and tissue donation or to sign up on the Yes Utah Donor Registry please log on to

www.yesutah.org

Page 13: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020 B1TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

School Days!

Lagoon is celebrating K-12 students and is offering the incredible price of

+ tax

for a Regular Single Day Passport with student ID! Parents, chaperones, and friends also receive a discounted price of $60.95 + tax for a Regular Single Day Passport.

Reservations are now required. Purchase your tickets today at lagoonpark.comand enter Promo Code: Student20 . End the gloom, come to Lagoon!

Offer valid through June 30, 2020

$34.50

Page 14: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020B2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

Bulletin BoardTooele

Senior CenterThe senior center is for the enjoyment of

all seniors 60 and older. Center hours are Monday thru Thursday 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Friday 8 a.m. to Noon. New and exciting activities include bridge, pinochle, bingo, crafts, pickleball, Mexican train, tangled art, yoga, exercise program, line dancing, wood carving, Wii games, watercolor class movies and health classes. Meals-On-Wheels available for homebound. Lunch served weekdays. For 60 and above, sug-gested contribution is $3. For those under 60, cost is $5. Transportation available to the store or doctor visits for residents in Tooele and Grantsville areas. For trans-portation information call 435-843-4114. For more information about the Tooele center, call 435-843-4110.

Tooele Pioneer Museum47 E Vine Street, Free Admission. Open

Memorial Day through Labor Day, Friday and Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Open most Tuesdays year round 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Open other times by appointment. Call 435-882-3168, 435-830-9784, 435-840-5139. World Class Indian arrowhead collec-tion. www.tooelepioneermuseum.org,

Mobile Vet CenterTo better serve veterans located in

Tooele County, the Mobile Vet Center (MVC) will visit Tooele every Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the eastern side of the Walmart parking lot, 99 W. 1280 North, Tooele. The MVC provides free, confidential counseling for theater veterans of all conflicts. For further information contact Dave Brown at 801-255-1499, call our 24/7 national call center 1-877-WARVETS or visit vetcenter.va.gov

Donate to libraryPlease remember the “Friends of the

Tooele City Library” while doing home cleaning and donate your used books to the bookstore in the library. Money from book sales is used to support programs within the library. The library is located at 128 W. Vine St. For more information, call 435-882-2182 or go online to tooelecity.org. Thank you for your support.

Books for the Whole FamilyDonated children’s books and paper-

backs are for sale for 25 cents, and hard-covers are being sold for $1 from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. on Fridays, 5-8 p.m. on Mondays and 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Tuesdays at the Tooele City Library. All proceeds go back to the library for projects and programs.

Little Free LibraryJoin us Saturday June 27th from 10 a.m.

to 12 p.m. at 965 S 1050 W. for the Grand Opening of the Little Free Library. Hosted by Kevin and Kathy Witt. Fun family activi-ties, chalk guest book, make a bookmark, mini golf, giant checker, hopscotch, etc. Special Guest, local published Author Konstanz Silverbow. For further informa-tion see www.littlefreelibrary.org.

GrantsvilleShare the past

Share the past, submit a history, obitu-ary, or a picture of a deceased relative. The Family History Center in Grantsville is assembling a record of Grantsville residents. Your submission may be made by emailing to [email protected] or by coming into the center at 115 E. Cherry St., or by mail to PO Box 744, Grantsville, Utah 84074. Come in and receive help from our trained consultants. For more information, call 435-884-5018 or 435-224-5010.

Senior CenterThe senior center is for the enjoyment

of all seniors 60 and older. Center hours are Monday thru Thursday 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Friday 8 a.m. to Noon. New and exciting activities include pinochle, bingo, crafts, bunko, therapeutic coloring, flint knapping, yoga, fly tying and exercise program, wood carving and health classes. Meals-On-Wheels available for homebound. Lunch served weekdays. For 60 and above, suggested contribu-tion is $3. For those under 60, cost is $5. Transportation available to the store or doctor visits for residents in Tooele and Grantsville areas. For transportation information call 435-843-4114. For more information about the Grantsville center, call 435-884-3446.

Daughters of Utah PioneersThe DUP is seeking any family histories,

photographs, books, stories or vintage artifacts (before 1900) to display at the DUP Grantsville Museum, located at 378 W. Clark St. (in the basement of the J. Reuben Clark Farmhouse across from the Grantsville Cemetery). For more informa-tion, call Ellen Yates at 435-884-0253 or Coralie Lougey at 435-884-3832. Visit www.grantsvilledupmuseum.com or www.exploretooele.com.

Grantsville IrrigationThe allotment for residents has been

changed to 100,000 gallons per residential share. Meter readings were taken June 1st. Agricultural users have been issued one regular turn for the season. Please evalu-

ate your watering habits and cut back as much as possible. Slowtheflow.org has a lawn watering guide as well as tips on ways to conserve. Thank you so much for your support.

SchoolsSt. Marguerite Catholic School

Students of all faiths are welcome from preschool through 8th grade at Tooele County’s only faith-based school. Featuring all-day Kindergarten, all-day preschool, junior high grades 6-8, small class sizes, and an enhanced STEM cur-riculum. Give us a call at 435-882-0081 or visit www.stmargschool.org.

High School ReunionsTooele High School Class of 2000 will

have their 20-year reunion on Saturday, June 20th. If you are one of our class-mates, or if you know one of our class-mates, please visit us at our Facebook page (Tooele High School Class of 2000) or contact Dan Young at 435-840-0148. We’re looking forward to celebrating with you!

EducationTooele Technical College

Programs with space available include the POST (Peace Officer Standards Training) program (Satellite Police Academy), Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) program and Software Development. These programs and others are offered at Tooele Tech. Enroll today and begin training for a promising career. Visit tooeletech.edu or call student servic-es at 435-248-1800 for more information.

Adult EducationGet your high school diploma this year

at the Tooele Community Learning Center. All classes required for a high school diploma, adult basic education, GED prep-aration and English as a second language are available. Register now to graduate — just $50 per semester. Located at 211 Tooele Blvd. Call 435-833-8750. Adult edu-cation classes are for students 18 and over.

ESOLESOL conversational classes are held

Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Tooele Community Learning Center. ESOL stu-dents may also come anytime the center is open for individualized study. Registration is $50 per semester. Located at 211 Tooele Blvd. Call 435-833-8750 for more informa-tion.

Early Head StartDDI VANTAGE Early Head Start offers

NO COST weekly home visits for families who are eligible under the age of 3. Home visits include parent and child education, assessments, and family support services including nutrition education. We also offer comprehensive health services for expecting mothers including prenatal parent education and support services. Apply online- ddivantage.org or call 435-882-3439.

Free developmental evaluationDDI VANTAGE Early Intervention offers

NO COST developmental evaluations for children ages birth to 3. We provide a full range of services for children with devel-opmental delays or disabilities. Our goal is to minimize the effects of the delay and reduce the need for long-term services throughout their school years. For more information call 435-833-0725 or visit us at ddivantage.org

CharityTooele Children’s Justice Center

Tooele Children’s Justice Center is in need of DVD-Rs, soda, bottled water and snacks. We appreciate all donations. For inquiries or drop-off, call 435-843-3440. 25 S. 100 East, Tooele.

United Methodist DinnerTooele United Methodist Church offers a

free dinner every Wednesday. Coffee and social hour starts at 4 p.m. and dinner is served from 5-6 p.m. All are welcome.

First Baptist Food PantryThe First Baptist Church in Tooele is

offering an emergency food pantry to meet the needs of our community. Hours are Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon. First Baptist Church is located at 580 S. Main Street. For information, call 435-882-2048.

Baby blankets neededBaby blankets are needed for the nurs-

ery at Mountain West Medical Center. Blankets should be new and in good condition. Homemade blankets are also accepted if new. Donations can be turned in to the volunteer desk at Mountain West Medical Center, 2055 N. Main Street in Tooele. Call Diane at 435-843-3691 with any questions.

Community ClosetClean out your closets. The Community

Closet is accepting donations for gently used clothing. Donations are accepted at your neighborhood school. Contact Christy Johnson at 435-830-4706 with any questions.

MooseMeals at Lodge

Friday and Saturday night dinners will be served from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Friday night dinners change weekly or you can order from the menu items Saturday night. All meals are for a reason-able price. No orders taken after 8:45 p.m.

Daily lunch specials are available at the lodge from 11 a.m.

Take out orders can be called in during our operating hours and picked up at the lodge at the time agreed on.

For members and their guests only.

EventsOur Veteran’s Day dinner’s are back. This

month it will be on Thursday 25 June at 5:30 p.m. Please come help recognize/honor one of our Veteran’s. For members and their guests only.

On June 25 & 26 Moose International will host a Virtual Convention, where LOOM members can vote on a “One Moose”. You can sign in on your own computer or come to the lodge and watch with the Board of Officers. The Convention starts at 8 a.m. on Thursday and goes until 8:30 p.m. Friday it starts at 9 a.m. and goes until 8 p.m.

Installation of new officers will be held on Sunday June 28th starting at 1 p.m. with the LOOM. The WOTM will start at 2 p.m.

EaglesSocial Room

We have opened up the social room. Currently the hours are from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. daily. We are staffed with volunteer bartenders and if you are interested in volunteering, contact one of the Aerie Trustees.

Membership renewals Please be advised that the renewal let-

ters come from the Grand Aerie and are not generated in the local Aerie. If you have received your new card, please dis-regard your renewal notice as they have most likely crossed in the mail. If you have not received your new card in two weeks, please contact your secretary.

MeetingsWe have resumed our regular meetings

on the 2nd and 4th Monday for Auxiliary Meetings and Thursday for the Aerie Meetings. We look forward to seeing you again. As we push toward normal, we will start with your charitable fundraising in the near future. Please join us. As you can imagine, everything can be subject to change with the ongoing Corona Virus, we will try to keep you updated of any changes. Thank you from your outgo-ing officers. Congratulations to Worthy President Nicole Kerwood and her officers and members.

ElksNotice to our Members

Elk’s locations are all closed until further notice.

Disabled Veterans Chapter 20

The “Jordan M. Byrd” Tooele County Chapter 20, for the Disabled American Veterans holds monthly general member-ship meetings at the Pioneer Museum, 47 E. Vine Street (rear basement door entrance) in Tooele, every third Thursday of the month at 7 p.m. We welcome and invite all veterans to come join us in the comradery with other veterans at our monthly meetings. Chapter 20 now has trained Chapter Service Officer’s (CSO’s) to answer questions concerning your VA benefits. Nations Service Officers (NSO’s) are available by appointment to help vet-erans and their families submit claims for compensation, obtain health and educa-tional well-earned benefits. ALL DAV ser-vices are Free of Charge. For information, please join our monthly meetings. No monthly meetings are held in December. Call commander Penny Larson 801-359-8468 or Adjutant James Yale at 435-849-0521 or Senior Vice Dustee Thomas at 435-830-8487. Please leave messages if no contact.

COVID-19 Help for DAVThe Disabled American Veterans

National Office has established a relief fund to provide financial aid to service-connected disabled veterans who have lost employment or income due to the COVID-19 Virus Pandemic. The issued grants are meant to help these disabled service connected veterans, pay bills, obtain food and provide for their families during these difficult times.

The application for this relief can be found at DAV.org/COVIDrelief. Veterans will need to fully complete the application and provide documentation verifying their status as a service-connected dis-abled veteran who has lost employment as a result of the pandemic. Disabled veterans who are small business owners or who work independently and have

been negatively impacted financially as a result of the virus may also be eligible for this assistance.

Historical SocietyMeetings Cancelled

Due to the Corona Virus/Covid 19, our meetings for April and May have been cancelled. We hope to see you Sept. 8, 2020.

Historical booksTooele County Historical Society’s books

are available to purchase at meetings. The History of Tooele County Volume II is $35, The Mining, Smelting, and Railroading in Tooele is $25, and we also have eight note cards depicting four different pioneer buildings for $4. These make great gifts for family and friends. Please call Alice Dale at 435-882-1612 if you would like to purchase these books.

Seeking Historical ItemsThe Tooele County Historical Society

would like members of the community who have any family or personal histories, photographs, books, brochures, DVDs, VHS tapes or newspaper articles that you would like to donate to our organization to please call us. We are also looking for books, newspaper articles, photos, bro-chures or any history that pertains to the Tooele County area. If you would like to donate them to our organization, or if you would let us make a copy for the Tooele County Historical Society, please call 435-882-1612.

Groups and EventsTooele County Arts Guild

All artists from Tooele County age 13 and above are welcome to join the Tooele County Arts Guild for an evening, or for the year as a member. Benefits of mem-bership include the opportunity to display your artwork for show and sale in various venues around Tooele County, as well as regular updates on events in our commu-nity. The best benefit is meeting other art-ist friends you wouldn’t meet otherwise! Call 435-228-8217 for more information.

Ladies Community Club of Tooele

To view upcoming events, learn more about our organization, or to become a member, please visit gfwctooele.org.

TOPS Weight Loss Support Group

The TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) Weight Loss Support Group meets every Tuesday in the Cornerstone Baptist Church located at 276 E. 500 North, Tooele. Weigh-in begins at 5:30 p.m. followed by a meeting at 6 p.m. Men, women and chil-dren are invited to attend. Come and let us help you live a healthier lifestyle! For more information visit TOPS.org or con-tact Mary Lou Beck at 435-228-8202.

Museum volunteers neededTooele Valley Museum & Historical Park

is seeking volunteers. Do you enjoy his-tory or science? Volunteers at the museum can gain new skills or practice old ones. We are looking for people to help with organization, exhibit development, gar-dening and educational program devel-opment. Volunteer positions are seasonal and year round. Scheduling is flexible. Volunteers must be at least 16 years old. To apply or request more information, send email to: [email protected]

Tooele Gem and Mineral Society The Tooele Gem and Mineral Society

meets the first Thursday of the month. Meetings are held from 7 to 9 p.m. in the downstairs conference room of the Pioneer Museum, 47 E. Vine St., Tooele. Come and learn about rocks, minerals, and ways to craft them, and enjoy field trips for rock collecting. Membership is $15 per year. For more information email [email protected].

Local author seeks photosA local author and historian is seeking

original photographs of Saltair, Black Rock, Garfield Beach and/or Lake Point, as well as any similar turn-of-the-century attractions and resorts for an upcoming book project. Those who wish to con-tribute information or photographs of these parks should contact Emma Penrod at [email protected]. Contributions will be printed with credit in a yet-to-be released pictorial history book. There is no such thing as too many photographs as the author needs a minimum of 160 photographs, and any help is greatly appreciated.

Tooele Valley Free MasonsTooele Valley Free Masons meet the

second Friday of each month for din-ner and socializing. If you are interested or have questions, please join us at the Lodge, located at the corner of Settlement Canyon Road and state Route 36, or call at 435-277-0087.

Tooele Valley Family History Center

Research your ancestors free with trained Family Search volunteers at the

Tooele Valley Family History Center, 751 N. 520 East, Tooele. Phone 435-882-1396. Hours of operation: Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday evenings 7-9 p.m. Wednesday evenings by appointment only. Special classes offered regularly. Call the center for more information.

Tooele Family Al-AnonAl-Anon meetings are held Wednesdays

at 11 a.m. in the Tooele Pioneer Museum’s basement at the back of the building. For questions or more information, please call Allene at 435-830-0465 or Perky at 435-241-2217.

Tooele Al-Anon Choices 4UThis group meets Sundays at 5 p.m. at

the Mountain Faith Lutheran Church, 560 S. Main St., Tooele. For more information, contact Gesele at 435-224-4015 or Jo-Ann at 435-849-4180.

Alcoholics AnonymousAlcoholics Anonymous meets at 60 S.

Main Street. Daily at noon and 8 p.m. Park in back.

Alcoholics AnonymousAlcoholics Anonymous meetings are

also held every Tuesday and Thursday at 7 p.m., at St. Barnabus Church, 1784 Aaron Dr., Tooele.

Young People in RecoveryYoung People in Recovery (YPR) hold

all recovery meetings on Thursdays at 6 p.m. in the Grantsville City Library, and also on the first and third Friday of the month at 5:30 p.m. in the Remington Park Apartments’ Clubhouse, 495 W. Utah Ave., Tooele. Questions contact Adam at 480-695-6611, Audrey 435-255-9518 or Heidi at 435-255-9905.

Family support groupGet your loved one sober. The USARA

Craft family support group is held Mondays at 6 p.m. in the large reading room at the Tooele City Library. Group books and materials provided. Craft is a free program for family members who have a loved one with a substance use disorder. For more information, call Heidi Warr at 435-255-9905.

Alzheimer’s Caregiver GroupJoin us the 2nd Monday of each month

from 2-3 p.m. at Mountain West Medical Center in Tooele. The Tooele County Health Department’s Aging Services pro-gram is the sponsor for these Alzheimer’s Association Caregiver Support Groups. The groups are designed to provide emo-tional, educational and social support for caregivers. Questions call 435-277-2440.

Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous

Are you having trouble controlling the way you eat? Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous (FA) is a free, 12-step recov-ery program for anyone suffering from food addiction. Meetings are held every Saturday at 9 a.m. at the Pioneer Museum, 47 E. Vine Street in Tooele. Enter at the north back entrance. For more informa-tion, call Millicent at 435-882-7094 or Colleen at 435-882-9019 or visit www.foodaddicts.org. Everyone is welcome to attend.

Tooele County AgingTooele County Aging is looking for

volunteers to help us meet the needs of seniors in the community. Many seniors require assistance and need rides to doc-tors or other professionals. Rides help seniors live more independent lives. Call 435-843-4114 for more information. The Grantsville and Tooele Senior Centers also are in need of volunteers. For more information about volunteering at the Grantsville Center call 435-884-3446. For volunteering at the Tooele Center call 435-843-4110.

Life’s Worth Living FoundationSuicide support group meetings are

held every fourth Thursday at 7 p.m. at Mountain West Medical Center, 2055 N. Main Street in Tooele, in the classroom by the cafeteria. If you struggle with suicidal thoughts or have lost a loved one to suicide, please plan on attending. Please go on Facebook and like our page to keep current with our latest news and events. Contact us on that page. Visit lifesworth-livingfoundation.com or call 435-248-LIVE.

Parkinson’s disease Support Group

A diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease can be overwhelming for the newly diag-nosed. Tooele has a support group for persons with Parkinson’s disease and their caregivers. You can learn how others are coping with PD and how to live well. We meet the third Friday of each month from

1-2 p.m. at Tooele Technology College, 88 S. Tooele Blvd., Tooele. For information, call Hal at 435-840-3683.

Tooele Naranon “Circle of Hope to Recovery”

Tooele Naranon meets Thursdays at 6:30 p.m. at 134 W. 1180 North, Ste. 4 in Tooele (Bonneville Mental Health). Open to all those affected by someone else’s addiction. As a 12-step program, we offer help by sharing our experience, strength and hope. For more information, please contact Terri at 435-313-4851.

Military Items WantedWhen you no longer want your mili-

tary items, do not take them to Deseret Industries or a thrift store. Bring them — hats, helmets, dress uniforms, boots, shoes, pants, jackets, backpacks, belts, canteens, pouches, old photos, etc. — to 775 S. Coleman Street. They will be displayed with honor and respect. Call Matthew or Tina at 435-882-8688.

Children’s Choir AuditionsRising Voices Children’s Choir is an audi-

tioned children’s choir for children 7-14 years of age. The talented Katelynd Blake, owner and director of Blake Music Studios, directs the choir. Blake has a degree in vocal performance and has taught at the collegiate level. If your child loves to sing and you are looking for an exceptional musical experience for them, this is it. For more information and to register for an audition, please visit blakemusicstudios.com or call 435-277-0755.

Rocky Mountain HospiceWant to have more meaning in your life.

Do you want to do something that is sat-isfying and of great service to your com-munity? Then become a Rocky Mountain Hospice volunteer. No experience required. All training, background check and TB tests provided by Rocky Mountain. The only requirement is your desire to help someone in need. Please contact Crystal Erickson at Willow Springs Rocky Mountain Care at 435-843-2094 or Sandy Parmegiani at Rocky Mountain Hospice at 801-397-4902.

The Next ChapterThe Next Chapter is a free social support

and educational program to help widows and widowers adjust to the loss of their spouse through monthly activities. You are invited to join others who are on the same page as you, to begin a new chapter in your life story. Call Sarah with Tooele County Aging Services at 435-277-2456 for more details.

Sons of Utah PioneersAnyone interested in the history of

Tooele City, Tooele County or Utah pio-neers, we need you. Please come and join us for a potluck social dinner at the LDS church, 192 W. 200 South, Tooele. For more information, please contact Joe Brandon, 435-830-9783 or 435-830-9784. The local Sons of Utah Pioneers meets the first Thursday of each month at 6:30 p.m.

TC Squares Dance ClubThe TC Squares Dance Club has begun

dancing again on Mondays at the Clarke Johnson Jr. High Cafetorium, 2152 N. 400 West, Tooele, from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Please bring finger food to share. For more infor-mation, contact Woody at 435-850-2441, Roberta at 801-349-5992 or visit the club’s website at tcsquares.com.

Tooele County HomemakersWe would like to invite all ladies to our

Homemakers club. Meetings are held on the first Tuesday of every month with a luncheon and raffle, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., September through May. Located at 151 N Main, in the auditorium of the Health Department and USU Extension offices. Come out and enjoy some fun. $5 due per year. For more information, call Eileen 435-882-5009 or 435-849-0854, Dianne 435-224-4814, or Thiel 435-238-8245. Thank you and we hope to see you all this September.

Tooele County QuiltersAll meetings are held on the third

Tuesday of each month in the Tooele County Health Dept. auditorium. Dues are $20 per year to be paid at the first meeting.

First Baptist ChurchThe Food Pantry at First Baptist Church

is open on Saturdays from 10 am to Noon for those who are in need of food. There are no requirements to receive food. We hope to be a blessing to you. We are locat-ed at 580 S. Main St., Tooele (882-2048).

Bulletin Board PolicyIf you would like to announce an upcoming event, contact the Transcript-Bulletin at 882-0050, fax to 882-6123 or email to [email protected]. “The Bulletin Board” is for special community events, charitable organizations, civic clubs, non-profit organizations, etc. For-profit businesses should contact the advertising depart-ment. Please limit your notice to 60 words or less. The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin cannot guarantee your announcement will be printed. To guarantee your announce-ment please call the advertising department at 882-0050. Information must be deliv-ered no later than 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date.

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELE

@TooeleTB

Follow us on Facebook!

Page 15: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

Tooele TranscripT BulleTin

ClassifiedTo place your Classified ad call 435-882-0050

To place your Classified ad call 435-882-0050

NOTICE Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. does not endorse, promote, or encourage the purchase of any product or service advertised in this newspaper. Advertisements are the sole responsibility of the advertiser. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. hereby disclaims all liability for any damages suffered as the result of any advertisement in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. is not responsible for any claims or representations made in advertisements in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. The Tooele Transcript- Bulletin has the sole authority to edit and locate any classified advertisement as deemed appropriate. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company reserves the right to refuse any advertisement.

All real estate advertised in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, religion, sex or national origin, or any intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this paper are available on an equal opportunity basis.

CLASSIFIED LINE AD RATES Rates for the Tooele Transcript Bulletin, published every Tuesday and Thursday

TwENTy wORDS OR LESS

$650 After 20 words30¢ per word/issue

Bold type 5¢ per word/issueBoxed ads 50¢ per issue

Classified ad deadlines: Monday 4:45 p.m. for Tuesday edition • Wednesday 4:45 p.m. for Thursday edition

MONTHLy RATE

$25An ad running a minimum of 8 consecutive issues

(20 words or less)

$2.00 per word over 20 wordsBold/boxed ads extra

No credit for stopped ads. Includes4 runs in the Tooele Valley Extra

All classified line ads running in the Tooele Transcript Bulletin on Tuesday or Thursday will automatically run in the Tooele Valley Extra, a separate publication that is delivered to all nonsubscribers of the Tooele Transcript Bulletin.

Tuesday June 23, 2020 B3

Smaller Tooele auto dealership in need of all around mechanic.Brakes, Struts, Fuel Injection, pretty much basic stuff. Looking for someone who is not afraid to try. Compensation commensurate with experience. Should live in Tooele Valley area. Random drug testing in place.

Please email resume [email protected]

All replies in strict confidence.

MECHANICWANTED

CARRIERSNeeded!

If you’re interested please call 435.882.0050

is looking for Paper Carriers in Tooele City!

Now Accepting ApplicationsIncome Restrictions ApplyRental assistance may be available. Call for details

435.843.0717TDD 800.735.2900

Now RentingIncome Restrictions Apply

Exclusively for SeniorsPet Friendly

Call for details435.843.0717

Now Accepting ApplicationsIncome Restrictions ApplyRental assistance may be available. Call for details

435.843.0717TDD 800.735.2900

Now RentingIncome Restrictions Apply

Exclusively for SeniorsPet Friendly

Call for details435.843.0717

Services

ALTERATIONSand AWARD

WINNING

TAILORINGby

KATHYJONES

882-6605A1 PAINTING. Inte-rior, exterior painting,staining, deck oiling,power washing, dry-wall, phase, patching.Professional work atreasonable rates.(435)248-9113

AERATION, (worksbest when wet) powerraking, tilling, hauling,sand, gravel, mulch,manure, landscaperock, lime rock, Sea-s o n a l S e r v i c e(435)850-2909

DRYWALL PATCH,Repairs Services.Texture, tape finish,basements. Licensedand insured. 18yrs inTooele. Referencesc a l l T o m a t801-660-9152.

HANDY-MAN SERV-ICES landscaping,etc. Senior Discount15% Licensed and in-s u r e d . c a l l435-830-9180

HANDYMAN, any kindof handyman work,yard work, leafcleanup. Residentialand business. CallJ i m m y a t(435)228-8561

HANSON & SONSHandyman Service,

local. Call Jeff:(435)775-1445

HOME REPAIRS ex-pert. Doors, knobs,trim, baseboards,mouldings, drywall re-pa i rs , tex tur ing,caulking, weather-proofing, framing,home updating andrenovat ions andmuch more. Smalljobs okay. CallS h a n e ( 4 3 5 )840-0344.

JOSE’S YARD MAIN-TENANCE, LLCAeration, Power Rak-ing, Mow, Trimmingtrees & bushes yardcleanup, hauling gar-bage, residential andcommercial . Lowrates. Licensed/In-sured. Senior dis-counts.(435)843-7614

RAIN GUTTERS ,seamless, aluminum,all colors, leaf protec-tion cleaning. Li-censed and insured,f ree es t ima tes .(435)841-4001

TREE WORK. Freeestimates! Localcompany. Licensed& insured. Buckettruck, Crane serv-ice, Stump removal,mulch.801-633-6685 Pre-ciseTreeLLC.com

Services

TOOELE TREE ANDSTUMP, LLC.Professional tree trim-ming or removal.Stump grinding. Alsodo yard debris cleanup and haul away.C a l l K o l l e e n435-849-6768.Closed Sundays.Free Estimates.

TREE TRIMMING ISACertified Arborist.Trees up to 40’ tall.Stump removal avail-able Call Stephen(435)241-2504.

YOUR LOCAL Handy-man here to fix allyour at home projectsand improvementsOver 22yrs experi-ence. Call Dustin at435-840-5635

Miscellaneous

DIAMONDS don't payretail! Large selec-tion, high quality. Bri-dal sets, weddingbands. Everythingwholesale! RockyMtn. Diamond Co.S.L.C.1-800-396-6948

DIRECTV - Switch andSave! $39.99/month.Select All-IncludedPackage. 155 Chan-nels. 1000s ofShows/Movies OnDemand. FREE Ge-nie HD DVR Up-grade. Premiummovie channels,FREE for 3 mos! Call1-833-599-6474

DIRECTV NOW. NoSatell i te Needed.$40/month. 65 Chan-nels. Stream Break-ing News, LiveEvents, Sports & OnDemand Titles. NoAnnual Contract. NoCommitment. CALL1-844-435-3985

DISH Network. $59.99for 190 Channels!Blazing Fast Internet,$19.99/mo. (whereavailable.) Switch &Get a FREE $100Visa Gift Card. FREEVoice Remote. FREEHD DVR. FREEStreaming on ALLDevices. Call today!1-866-360-6959

Earthlink High SpeedInternet. As Low As$14.95/month (for thefirst 3 months.) Reli-able High Speed Fi-ber Optic Technol-ogy. Stream Videos,Music and More! CallEar th l ink Today1-844-240-1769

Eliminate gutter clean-ing forever! LeafFilter,the most advanceddebris-blocking gutterprotection. Schedulea FREE LeafFilter es-timate today. 15% offEntire Purchase. 10%Senior & Military Dis-c o u n t s . C a l l1-844-909-2398

SELL YOUR computerin the classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

HAVING A yard sale?Advertise in the Tran-script

Miscellaneous

ENJOY 100% Per-fectly Tender andGuaranteed! 20 MainCourses PLUS get 4FREE Burgers OrderThe Butcher's Bundle- ONLY $69.99. Call1-855-963-1321 men-tion code:61086ZEBor visit www.omahas-teaks.com/dinner138

HughesNet SatelliteInternet - 25mbpsstarting at $49.99/mo!Get More DataFREE Off-Peak Data.FAST downloadspeeds. WiFi built in!FREE Standard In-stallation for leasecustomers! LimitedT i m e , C a l l1-844-294-9882

If you sell Insurance,promote a hospital oran ambulance serv-ice, place your classi-fied ad in all 47 ofUtah's newspapers.The cost is only $163.for a 25 word ad ($5.For each additionalword). You will reachup to 500,000 news-paper readers. Justcall Tooele TranscriptB u l l e t i n a t(435)882-0050 for de-tails. (Ucan)

You may have just thething someone out oftown is looking for.Place your classifiedad in 45 of Utah'snewspapers, the costis $163. For up to 25words. You will bereaching a potentialof up to 340,000households. All youneed to do is call theTranscript Bulletin at882-0050 for full de-tails. (Mention UCAN)

Furniture & Appliances

NORTH VALLEY Ap-pliance. Washers/dryers refrigerators,freezers, stoves.$149-$399 full war-ranty. Complete re-pair service. Satis-faction guaranteed.Parts for all brands.(435)830-3225.

Portable Oxygen Con-centrator May BeCovered by Medi-care! Reclaim inde-pendence and mobil-ity with the compactdesign and long-last-ing battery of InogenOne. Free informationk i t ! C a l l877-691-4639

Garage, Yard Sales

HAVING A GARAGESALE? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050

YARD SALE Saturday8am at 369 Curloss,near Stansbury HighSchool.

Livestock

Need to sell that newchampion bull or youryear l ing calves?Place your classifiedad into 47 newspa-pers, find your buyersquickly. For only$163. your 25 wordclassified will be seenby up to 500,000readers. It is as sim-ple as calling theTooele TranscriptB u l l e t i n a t(435)882-0050 for de-tails. (Ucan)

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

Sporting Goods

SELL ING YOURmountain bike? Ad-vertise it in the classi-fieds. Call 882-0050www.tooele tran-script.com

Personals

Meet singles right now!No paid operators,just real people likeyou. Browse greet-ings, exchange mes-sages and connectlive. Try it free. Callnow: 844-400-8738

Help Wanted

Business owners Ifyou need someonefast, place your clas-sified ad in all 48 ofUtah's newspapers.The person you arelooking for could befrom out of town. Thecost is only $163. fora 25 word ad and itreaches up to340,000 households.All you do is call theTranscript Bulletin at(435)882-0050 for allthe details. (MentionUCAN) You can nowo r d e r o n l i n ewww.utahpress.com

IMMEDIATE Full timepositions available inTooele for warehouseproduction. Must beable to pass back-ground. Shift avail-able Wednesday toSaturday $15.50 perhour paid weekly.Ca l l Rose a t719-644-4569

Business Opportunities

INVENTORS - FREEINFORMATIONPACKAGE Have yourproduct idea devel-oped affordably bythe Research & De-velopment pros andpresented to manu-facturers. Cal l1-877-649-5574 for aFree Idea StarterGuide. Submit youridea for a free consul-tation.

Small Business own-ers: Place your clas-sified ad in 45 news-papers throughoutUtah for only $163.for 25 words, and $5.per word over 25.You will reach up to340,000 householdsand it is a one call,one order, one billprogram. Call theTranscript Bulletin at882-0050 for furtherinfo. (ucan)

Wanted

I AM paying more forjunk cars/trucks. I willcome to you and towit away. Call/Text(435)224-2064DL5970

Autos

DONATE YOUR CARTO UNITED BREASTCANCER FOUNDA-TION! Your donationhelps education, pre-vention & supportprograms. FASTFREE PICKUP - 24HR RESPONSE -TAX DEDUCTION1-855-507-2691

DEADLINES FORclassifieds ads areM o n d a y a n dWednesdays by 4:45p.m.

Autos

DONATE YOUR CAR,TRUCK OR BOATTO HERITAGE FORTHE BLIND. Free 3Day Vacation, TaxDeduct ible, FreeTowing, All Paper-work Taken Care Of.CALL1-855-408-2196

DONATE your car,truck or van. Helpveterans find jobs orstart a business. CallPatriotic Hearts Foun-dation. Fast, FREEpick-up. Max tax-de-duction. Operatorsare standing by! Call1-866-983-3647

SELL YOUR CAR orboat in the classi-fieds. Call 882-0050or visit www.tooele-transcript. com

Apartments for Rent

FOR RENT 175 souton Willow St. Unit#101 2bdrm, 1 bth,$700/mo +utilities, wtrpaid. Avl July 1, Con-tact 801-518-8670.

Homes

Planning on sellingyour home, you couldbe sending your salespoints to up to340,000 householdsat once. For $163.you can place your25 word classified adto all 45 newspapersin Utah. Just call theTranscript Bulletin at882-0050 for all thedetai ls. (Mentionucan)

SELL ING YOURHOME? Advertise itin the classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

Water Shares

WANTED settlementcanyon water share

if no answer leavemessage will returnc a l l K e n801-231-8104

Buildings

If you build, remodel orremove buildings youcan place your classi-fied ad in 45 of Utah'snewspapers for only$163. for 25 words($5. for each addi-tional word). You willreach up to 340,000households and allyou do is call theTranscript Bulletin at882-0050 for all thedetai ls. (MentionUCAN Classified Net-work)

METAL ROOF/WALLPanels, Pre-engi-neered Metal Build-ings. Mill prices forsheeting coil are at a4 year low. You getthe savings. 17 Col-ors prime material,cut to your exactlength. CO BuildingSystems1-800-COBLDGS

Public Notices Meetings

Deadline for publicnotices is 4 p.m. theday prior to publica-tion. Public noticessubmitted past thedeadline will not beaccepted.UPAXLP

Public Notices Meetings

ATTENTION: Nomembers of the publicwill be allowed to at-tend this meeting dueto the approval ofHB5002. No com-ments will be allowedduring the meeting. Ifyou would like to makecomment, please sendt h e m t [email protected] NOTICE:The Grantsville CityCouncil will hold a spe-cial meeting at 7:00p.m. on Wednesday,June 24, 2020 at 429East Main Street,Grantsville, UT 84029.The agenda is as fol-lows:ROLL CALLAGENDA:1. Fraud and ethicstraining.2. Discussion on thePresidents Park Subdi-vision.3. Adjourn.Christine WebbCity RecorderIn compliance with theAmericans with Dis-ability Act, GrantsvilleCity will accommodatereasonable requests toassist persons withdisabilities to partici-pate in meetings. Re-quests for assistancemay be made by call-ing City Hall (435)884-3411 at least 3days in advance of ameeting.This will be an elec-tronic meeting throughZOOM. To view themeeting:(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin June 23, 2020)

PUBLIC HEARINGNOTICENOTICE IS HEARBYGIVEN THAT THEVERNON TOWNCOUNCIL will hold aPUBLIC HEARINGand its regular meetingon July 7, 2020 at 7:00p.m. at the Vernon FireStation, 325 S. MainStreet, Vernon, Utah.If individuals cannot at-tend the Public Hear-ing they can send theirwritten comments tothe Town of Vernon,PO Box 134, Vernon,Utah 84080. Anycomments on Face-book or other socialmedia will not beshared at the hearing.P u b l i c H e a r i n gAgenda:Consideration of pro-posal to Amend theTown of Vernon's Zon-ing map for Will andLisa Durrant(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin June 23, 25, 30,July 2 & 7, 2020)

PUBLIC NOTICENOTICE IS HERBYGIVEN THAT theTooele Planning Com-mission will hold apublic hearing duringtheir business meetingscheduled for July 8,2020 at 7:00 P.M. inthe City Counci lChambers of City Halllocated at 90 NorthMain Street, Tooele,Utah.Public Hearing on aConditional Use Permitto allow an “AccessoryDrive Through Facility”for Tower CenterBuilding E proposed tobe located at 168 West1200 North in the GCGeneral Commercialzoning district on ap-proximately 1.1 Acres.Tooele City has imple-mented Governor Her-bert’s low risk (yellow)phase guidelines re-garding public gather-ings.� We strongly en-courage anyone inter-ested to join the Plan-n ing Commissionmeeting electronicallyby logging on to theTooele City Facebookp a g e , a thttps://www.facebook.com/tooelecity.� If youchoose to attend thismeeting in person weask that you maintainsocial distancing andwear a face covering.�In compliance withpublic health guide-lines Tooele City canaccommodate limitedcapacity at City Hall.�Due to limited spaceand social distancingrequirements, we askthat you limit the num-ber of people that at-tend with you.Pursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, individuals need-ing special accommo-dation during thismeeting should notifyAndrew Aagard, CityPlanner / Zoning Ad-ministrator at (435)843-2132 or TDD(435) 843-2180 prior tothe meeting.(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin June 23, 2020)

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICENOTICE IS HERBYGIVEN THAT theTooele Planning Com-mission will hold apublic hearing duringtheir business meetingscheduled for July 8,2020 at 7:00 P.M. inthe City Counci lChambers of City Halllocated at 90 NorthMain Street, Tooele,Utah.Public Hearing on aConditional Use Permitto allow an “AccessoryDrive Through Facility”for Tower CenterBuilding E proposed tobe located at 168 West1200 North in the GCGeneral Commercialzoning district on ap-proximately 1.1 Acres.Tooele City has imple-mented Governor Her-bert’s low risk (yellow)phase guidelines re-garding public gather-ings.� We strongly en-courage anyone inter-ested to join the Plan-n ing Commissionmeeting electronicallyby logging on to theTooele City Facebookp a g e , a thttps://www.facebook.com/tooelecity.� If youchoose to attend thismeeting in person weask that you maintainsocial distancing andwear a face covering.�In compliance withpublic health guide-lines Tooele City canaccommodate limitedcapacity at City Hall.�Due to limited spaceand social distancingrequirements, we askthat you limit the num-ber of people that at-tend with you.Pursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, individuals need-ing special accommo-dation during thismeeting should notifyAndrew Aagard, CityPlanner / Zoning Ad-ministrator at (435)843-2132 or TDD(435) 843-2180 prior tothe meeting.(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin June 23, 2020)

Public Notices Trustees

Deadline for publicnotices is 4 p.m. theday prior to publica-tion. Public noticessubmitted past thedeadline will not beaccepted.UPAXLP

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following de-scribed property will besold at public auctionto the highest bidder,payable in lawfulmoney of the UnitedStates at the time ofsale, at the TooeleCounty Courthouse,74 South 100 East,Tooele, UT 84074, onJuly 22, 2020, at 1:00p.m. of said day, forthe purpose of fore-closing a trust deeddated October 14,2016, and executed byTHERESA MOORE, ASINGLE WOMAN, asTrustor, in favor ofMORTGAGE ELEC-TRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS, INC.("MERS") SOLELY ASNOMINEE FOR SE-CURITYNATIONALMORTGAGE COM-PANY, ITS SUCCES-SORS AND ASSIGNSas Beneficiary, whichTrust Deed was re-corded on October 18,2016, as Entry No.437576, in the OfficialRecords of TooeleCounty, State of Utahcovering real propertypurportedly located at38 Millpond, StansburyPark, Utah� 84074 inTooele County, Utah,and more particularlydescribed as:LOT 38, MILLPONDPUD "G" SECONDAMENDED, ACCORD-ING TO THE OFFI-CIAL PLAT THEREOFON FILE AND OF RE-CORD IN THETOOELE COUNTYRECORDER'S OF-FICE, STATE OFUTAH.Tax ID: 09-039-0-0038The current Benefici-ary of the trust deed isUTAH HOUSINGCORPORATION, andthe record owner ofthe property as of therecording of the Noticeo f D e f a u l t i sTHERESA L. MOORE,TRUSTEES OR SUC-CESSOR TRUSTEESOF THE THERESALEE MOORE LIVINGTRUST EXECUTEDJANUARY 31, 2017.Bidders must tender tot h e t r u s t e e a$20,000.00 deposit atthe sale and the bal-ance of the purchaseprice by 2:00 p.m. theday following the sale.�Both the deposit andthe balance must bepaid to Lincoln Title In-surance Agency in theform of a wire transfer,cashier's check or cer-tified funds.� Cash pay-men ts , pe rsona lchecks or trust checksare not accepted.DATED: June 15,2020.LINCOLN TITLE IN-SURANCE AGENCYBy: Shelby K. IrvinIts: Authorized AgentTelephone: (801)476-0303web site: www.smith-knowles.comSK File No.� 19-1214(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin June 16, 23 & 30,2020)

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following de-scribed property will besold at public auctionto the highest bidder,payable in lawfulmoney of the UnitedStates at the time ofsale, at the TooeleCounty Courthouse,74 South 100 East,Tooele, UT 84074, onJuly 22, 2020, at 1:00p.m. of said day, forthe purpose of fore-closing a trust deeddated October 14,2016, and executed byTHERESA MOORE, ASINGLE WOMAN, asTrustor, in favor ofMORTGAGE ELEC-TRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS, INC.("MERS") SOLELY ASNOMINEE FOR SE-CURITYNATIONALMORTGAGE COM-PANY, ITS SUCCES-SORS AND ASSIGNSas Beneficiary, whichTrust Deed was re-corded on October 18,2016, as Entry No.437576, in the OfficialRecords of TooeleCounty, State of Utahcovering real propertypurportedly located at38 Millpond, StansburyPark, Utah� 84074 inTooele County, Utah,and more particularlydescribed as:LOT 38, MILLPONDPUD "G" SECONDAMENDED, ACCORD-ING TO THE OFFI-CIAL PLAT THEREOFON FILE AND OF RE-CORD IN THETOOELE COUNTYRECORDER'S OF-FICE, STATE OFUTAH.Tax ID: 09-039-0-0038The current Benefici-ary of the trust deed isUTAH HOUSINGCORPORATION, andthe record owner ofthe property as of therecording of the Noticeo f D e f a u l t i sTHERESA L. MOORE,TRUSTEES OR SUC-CESSOR TRUSTEESOF THE THERESALEE MOORE LIVINGTRUST EXECUTEDJANUARY 31, 2017.Bidders must tender tot h e t r u s t e e a$20,000.00 deposit atthe sale and the bal-ance of the purchaseprice by 2:00 p.m. theday following the sale.�Both the deposit andthe balance must bepaid to Lincoln Title In-surance Agency in theform of a wire transfer,cashier's check or cer-tified funds.� Cash pay-men ts , pe rsona lchecks or trust checksare not accepted.DATED: June 15,2020.LINCOLN TITLE IN-SURANCE AGENCYBy: Shelby K. IrvinIts: Authorized AgentTelephone: (801)476-0303web site: www.smith-knowles.comSK File No.� 19-1214(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin June 16, 23 & 30,2020)

Public Notices Water User

Deadline for publicnotices is 4 p.m. theday prior to publica-tion. Public noticessubmitted past thedeadline will not beaccepted.UPAXLP

Public Notices Miscellaneous

Deadline for publicnotices is 4 p.m. theday prior to publica-tion. Public noticessubmitted past thedeadline will not beaccepted.UPAXLP

NOTICE OF PUBLICAUCTIONDepot Self Storage, lo-cated at 1685 W.James Way, Tooele,UT, 84074, herebygives��Mandy Ham-mond, last known ad-dress 2980 W. Wey-mouth Rd, West Val-ley, UT 84119 noticethat we are asserting apossessory lien on theproperty stored in unit#850A. The lien is as-serted for unpaidrental charges, latefees, and other associ-ated charges incurredfor the rent of the stor-age space. Theamount of the lien is$606.00The property subject tothis lien is: Householdfurniture, appliances,misc. boxes, yardtools, tools, babyitems.Unless full payment ismade by July 6, 2020at 5:00 p.m., the prop-erty becomes the pos-session of Depot SelfStorage, L.C., to dis-pose of as provided bylaw, to satisfy the lien.�All unpaid charges willbe sent to collections.(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin June 23, 2020)

SELL ING YOURHOME? Advertise itin the classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

Public Notices Miscellaneous

SUMMONSIN THE THIRD JUDI-C I A L D I S T R I C TCOURT-TOOELE INAND FOR TOOELECOUNTY, STATE OFUTAHROBIN PARSONS,Plaintiff, vsTAGE M. NYMAN ESTOF ET AL. and JOHNDOES 1 through 10,Defendant.Case No. 200300379Hon. Dianna GibsonTHE STATE OF UTAHTO THE ABOVE-NAMED DEFEN-DANTS:You are hereby sum-moned and required tofile an Answer in Writ-ing to the Complaint toQuiet Title with theClerk of the above-en-titled Court at 70 South100 East, Tooele, Utah84074, and to serveupon or mail to WilliamB. Parsons III, Attor-ney for petitioner, P.O.Box 22626, Salt LakeCity, Utah 84122, acopy of said Answer,within twenty (20) daysafter service of thisSummons upon you.The Complaint can beacquired by contactingWilliam B. Parsons IIIat the address aboveindicated or from theClerk of the Court un-der the case numbershown above.If you fail to do so,Judgment by Defaultwill be taken againstyou for the relief de-manded in the Com-plaint, which has beenfiled with the Clerk ofthe Court, and copy ofwhich is hereto an-nexed and herewithserved upon you.DATED this 11th dayof June, 2020.William B. Parsons IIIAttorney for Plaintiff(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin June 16, 23, 30 &July 7, 2020)

TOWN OF VERNONREQUEST FOR PRO-POSALS SNOW RE-MOVAL SERVICESThe Town of Vernon isinviting bids from quali-fied persons or firmsinterested in enteringinto a contract to pro-vide snow plowing andsalt/sand applicationsfor the Vernon TownRoads fo r t he2020-2021 and the2021-2022 winter roadmaintenance seasonson an as needed ba-sis. Interested appli-cants must carry gen-eral liability insuranceand automobile liabilityinsurance as specifiedby the Town. Specifi-cations and the pro-posed contract areavailable by contactingDennis Clark at (435)830-9019.Sealed bids must bereceived by AngieHolden at P.O. Box134, Vernon, Utah84080, prior to 5:00PM on June 30, 2020.All bids will be openedand formally consid-ered at the regularVernon Town CouncilMeeting on July 7,2020 at 7:00 p.m. TheTown of Vernon is anEqual Opportunity Em-ployer.Dated this 10th day ofJune, 2020.Angie HoldenVernon Town Clerk(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin June 16, 18, 23,25 & 30, 2020)

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

Subscribe Today! 58 N. Main Street (435) 882-0050

Money Saving Coupons in Tuesday’s Paper

BULLETINBULLETINBULLETINBULLETINBULLETINB

Page 16: TOOELE BTULLETIN RANSCRIPTtooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/6-23-20... · 2020-06-06 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY June 23, 2020 Vol. 127 No. 7 $1.00 S˜˚˛˝˙ˆ

TUESDAY June 23, 2020B4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETINTUESDAY October 2, 2018 A1TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

100 Greatest Fiction Writers

Hans Christian Andersen1805 – 1875

The Emperor’s New Clothes The Ice-MaidenThe Little MermaidThe Snow QueenThe Ugly Duckling“The whole world is a series of

miracles, but we’re so used to them we call them ordinary things.”

Issac Asimov 1920 – 1992

FoundationFoundation and EmpireSecond FoundationI, RobotFantastic Voyage“Self-education is, I firmly

believe, the only kind of education there is. The only function of a school is to make self-education easier; failing that, it does nothing.”

Jane Austen 1775 – 1817

Sense and SensibilityPride and PrejudiceMansfield ParkEmma“A person who is knowingly

bent on bad behavior, gets upset when better behavior is expected of them.”

Ray Bradbury 1920 – 2012

The Martian ChroniclesFahrenheit 451Dandelion WineSomething Wicked

This Way Comes“You don’t have to burn books

to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them.”

Charlotte Brontë 1816 – 1855

Jane Eyre“Crying does not indicate that

you are weak. Since birth, it has always been a sign that you are alive.”

Emily Brontë 1818 – 1848

Wuthering Heights“If I could I would always work

in silence and obscurity, and let my efforts be known by their results.”

Robert Browning 1812 – 1889

My Last DuchessPorphyria’s LoverThe Ring and the BookA Pretty WomanLife In a Love“Grow old with me! The best is

yet to be.”

John Bunyan 1628 – 1688

The Pilgrim’s Progress“You have not lived today until

you have done something for someone who can never repay you.”

Edgar Rice Burroughs1875 – 1950

Tarzan of the ApesThe Princess of Mars“If I had followed my better

judgment always, my life would have been a very dull one.”

Lord Byron 1788 – 1824

Don JuanShe Walks in BeautyDarknessThe Corsair“Those who will not reason, are

bigots, those who cannot, are fools, and those who dare not, are slaves.”

Lewis Carroll 1832 – 1898

Alice in WonderlandThrough the Looking GlassJabberwocky“I can’t go back to yesterday

– because I was a different person then.”

Willa Cather 1873 – 1947

My ÁntoniaThe Song of the LarkO PoineersDeath Comes for the

Archbishop“Miracles surround us at every

turn if we but sharpen our perceptions of them.”

Miguel de Cervantes 1547 – 1616

Don Quixote“In order to attain the

impossible, one must attempt the absurd.”

Geoffrey Chaucer 1343 – 1400

The Canterbury Tales“The devil can only destroy

those who are already on their way to damnation.”

Anton Chekhov1860 – 1904

The Lady with the DogKashtankaThe Bet“Everything on earth is

beautiful, everything -- except what we ourselves think and do when we forget the higher purposes of life and our own human dignity.”

Agatha Christy 1890 – 1976

Murder on the Orient Express

The A.B.C. MurdersThe Mysterious Affair

at StylesEndless Night“Nobody knows what another

person is thinking. They may imagine they do, but they are nearly always wrong.”

Tom Clancy 1947 – 2013

The Hunt for Red OctoberPatriot GamesThe Sum of All Fears“What the government is good

at is collecting taxes, taking away your freedoms and killing people. It’s not good at much else.”

Louisa May Alcott1832 – 1888

Little WomenLittle Men“The power of finding beauty

in the humblest things makes home happy and life lovely.”

Arthur C. Clarke 1917 – 2008

2001: A Space Odyssey“Any sufficiently advanced

technology is indistinguishable from magic.”

F. Scott Fitzgerald 1896 – 1940

The Great GatsbyTender Is the Night“Suddenly she realized that

what she was regretting was not the lost past but the lost future, not what had not been but what would never be.”

Aldous Huxley 1894 – 1963

Brave New World“People will come to love their

oppression, to adore the technologies that undo their capacities to think.”

Margaret Mitchell 1900 – 1949

Gone With the Wind“Life’s under no obligation to

give us what we expect. We take what we get and are thankful it’s no worse than it is.”

William Makepeace Thackeray1811 – 1863

Vanity Fair“Do not be in a hurry to succeed.

What would you have to live for afterwards? Better make the horizon your goal; it will always be ahead of you.”

J. R. R. Tolkien1892 – 1973

The HobbitThe Lord of the Rings“The birth, death, and

resurrection of Jesus means that one day everything sad will come untrue.”

Leo Tolstoy1828 – 1910

War and PeaceAnna Karenina“The birth, death, and

resurrection of Jesus means that one day everything sad will come untrue.”

Mark Twain1835 – 1910

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer

Life on the MississippiRoughing ItA Connecticut Yankee in

King Arthur’s CourtThe Innocents Abroad“No amount of evidence will

ever persuade an idiot”

John Updike1932 – 2009

The Witches of EastwickRabbit Angstrom:

A TetralogyOf the FarmThe Maples Stories“It is easy to love people in

memory; the hard thing is to love them when they are there in front of you.”

Jules Vern1828 – 1905

Journey to the Center of the Earth

Around the World in Eighty Days

Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea

“Anything you can imagine you can make real.”

Virgil70 – 19 BC

The Aeneid“Maybe one day we shall be

glad to remember even these hardships.”

Kurt Vonnegut1922 – 2007

Slaughterhouse-Five“True terror is to wake up one

morning and discover that your high school class is running the country.”

Robert Penn Warren1905 – 1989

All the King’s Men“You have to make the good out

of the bad because that is all you have got to make it out of.”

H. G. Wells1866 – 1946

The War of the WorldsThe Time MachineThe Invisible ManThe Island of Doctor Moreau“We must not allow the clock

and the calendar to blind us to the fact that each moment of life is a miracle and mystery.”

Walt Whitman1819 – 1892

Leaves of Grass“Either define the moment or

the moment will define you.”

Oscar Wilde1854 – 1900

The Picture of Dorian GrayThe Importance of Being

Earnest“Be yourself; everyone else is

taken.”

Tennessee Williams1911 – 1983

A Streetcar Named DesireCat on a Hot Tin Roof“There is a time for departure

even when there’s no certain place to go.”

Owen Wister1860 – 1938

The Virginian“When a man ain’t got no ideas

of his own, he’d ought to be kind o’ careful who he borrows ‘em from.”

Virginia Woolf1882 – 1941

To the LighthouseA Room of One’s OwnOrlandoMrs. Dalloway“You cannot find peace by

avoiding life.”

William Butler Yeats1865 – 1939

A Prayer for My DaughterSailing to Byzantium“Education is not the filling of a

pail, but the lighting of a fire.”

William Wordsworth1770 – 1850

Composed Upon Westminster Bridge

I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud

London, 1802Tintern Abbey“That best portion of a man’s

life, his little, nameless, unremembered acts of kindness and love.”

George Orwell 1903 – 1950

Animal FarmNineteen Eighty-four“The further a society drifts

from truth the more it will hate those who speak it.”

Edgar Allan Poe 1809 – 1849

The RavenThe Tell-Tale HeartThe Fall of the House

of Usher“I became insane, with long

intervals of horrible sanity.”

Katherine Ann Porter 1890 – 1980

Pale Horse, Pale RiderNoon WineShip of Fools“You shouldn’t side-step

suffering if you have to go through it to get where you’re going.”

Marcel Proust 1871 – 1922

In Search of Lost TimeSwann’s Way“The real voyage of discovery

consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes.”

Alexander Pushkin 1799 – 1837

Eugene OneginThe Shot“It is better to have dreamed a

thousand dreams that never were than never to have dreamed at all.”

J. D. Salinger 1919 – 2010

The Catcher in the Rye“One day a long time from now

you’ll cease to care anymore whom you please or what anybody has to say about you. That’s when you’ll finally produce the work you’re capable of.”

William Shakespeare 1564 – 1616

HamletMacbethRomeo and JulietJulius CaesarA Midsummer’s Night DreamThe TempestKing LearMuch Ado About NothingTwelfth NightAs You Like ItThe Taming of the ShrewHenry VOthelloMeasure for MeasureThe Merchant of VeniceLove’s Labour Lost“What a terrible era in which

idiots govern the blind.”

Sidney Sheldon 1917 – 2007

The Sands of TimeThe Other Side of MidnightThe Best Laid PlansThe Stars Shine DownRage of Angles“Life is like a novel. It’s filled

with suspense. You have no idea what is going to happen until you turn the page.”

Mary Shelley 1797 – 1851

Frankenstein“A human being in perfection

ought always to preserve a calm and peaceful mind and never to allow passion or a transitory desire to disturb his tranquility.”

Upton Sinclair 1878 – 1968

The Jungle“It is difficult to get a man to

understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.”

John Steinbeck1902 – 1968

The Grapes of WrathThe PearlEast of EdenCannery RowTortilla Flat“Only let a man say that he will

do something and a whole mechanism goes to work to stop him.”

Robert Louis Stevenson1850 – 1894

Treasure IslandThe Strange Case of

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde“Don’t judge each day by the

harvest you reap but by the seeds that you plant.”

Harriet Beecher Stowe1811 – 1896

Uncle Tom’s Cabin“No ornament of a house can

compare with books; they are constant company in a room, even when you are not reading them.”

Jonathan Swift1667 – 1745

Gulliver’s Travels“You should never be ashamed

to admit you have been wrong. It only proves you are wiser today than yesterday”

Alfred, Lord Tennyson1809 – 1892

The Charge of the Light Brigade

UlyssesIn Memoriam A. H. H.Crossing the BarThe Lady of Shalott“It’s better to have tried

and failed than to live life wondering what would’ve happened if I had tried.”

Henrik Ibsen 1828 – 1906

A Doll’s HousePeer Gynt“There is always a risk in being

alive, and if you are more alive, there is more risk.”

Washington Irving 1783 – 1859

The Legend of Sleepy HollowRip Van Winkle“One of the greatest and

simplest tools for learning more and growing is doing more.”

Henry James 1843 – 1916

The Portrait of a LadyThe Turn of the ScrewThe Ambassadors“Excellence does not require

perfection.”

James Joyce 1882 – 1941

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

Ulysses“Your mind will give back to you

exactly what you put into it.”

Steven King 1947 –

The ShiningChristineThe Shawshank RedemptionThe Green Mile“Monsters are real, and ghosts

are real too. They live inside us, and sometimes, they win.”

Rudyard Kipling 1865 – 1936

The Jungle BookJust So StoriesThe Man Who Would Be

KingIf“A man can never have too much

red wine, too many books, or too much ammunition”

Louis L’Amour 1908 – 1988

HondoSilver CanyonTo the Far Blue MountainsSackett’s LandLonely on the MountainLast of the BreedThe Haunted MesaJubal Sackett“There will come a time when

you believe everything is finished. That will be the beginning.”

D. H. Lawrence 1885 – 1930

Lady Chatterley’s LoverSons and Lovers“Men fight for liberty and win

it with hard knocks. Their children, brought up easy, let it slip away again, poor fools. And their grandchildren are once more slaves.”

C. S. Lewis 1898 – 1963

The Chronicles of NarniaThe Screwtape LettersThe Great DivorceTill We Have Faces“When the whole world is

running towards a cliff, he who is running in the opposite direction appears to have lost his mind.”

Sinclair Lewis 1885 – 1951

Main StreetBabbittElmer Gantry“I must say I’m not very fond of

oratory that’s so full of energy it hasn’t any room for facts.”

Jack London 1876 – 1916

The Call of the WildTo Build a FireWhite Fang“Life is not a matter of holding

good cards, but sometimes, playing a poor hand well.”

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 1807 – 1882

Paul Revere’s RideThe Song of HiawathaEvangelineThe Courtship of Miles

Standish“It takes less time to do a thing

right, than it does to explain why you did it wrong.”

Herman Melville 1819 – 1891

Moby Dick“It is better to fail in originality

than to succeed in imitation.”

James A. Michener 1907 – 1997

Tales of the South PacificThe SourcePoland“If you reject the food, ignore

the customs, fear the religion and avoid the people, you might better stay home.”

Arthur Miller 1915 – 2005

Death of a Salesman“If you reject the food, ignore

the customs, fear the religion and avoid the people, you might better stay home.”

John Milton 1608 – 1674

Paradise Lost“He who reigns within himself

and rules passions, desires, and fears is more than a king.”

Gustav Flaubert 1821 – 1880

Madame Bovary“I believe that if one always

looked at the skies, one would end up with wings.”

Ian Fleming 1908 – 1964

Casino RoyaleDr. NoGoldfingerYou Only Life TwiceThe Spy Who Loved Me“Once is happenstance. Twice

is coincidence. Three times is enemy action.”

Robert Frost 1874 – 1963

The Road Not TakenMending WallAfter Apple PickingAcquainted with the Night“In three words I can sum up

everything I’ve learned about life: it goes on.”

Johann von Goethe 1749 – 1832

FaustPrometheus“The moment one definitely

commits oneself, then Providence moves too. Whatever you think you can do, or believe you can do, begin it. Action has magic, power and grace.”

William Golding1911 – 1993

Lord of the Flies“We have a disharmony in

our natures. We cannot live together without injuring each other.”

Zane Grey 1872 – 1939

Riders of the Purple Sage“Never insult seven men when

all your packing is a six-shooter.”

John Grisham 1955 –

The FirmThe ReckoningThe Pelican BriefThe Rainmaker“When witnesses concoct lies,

they often miss the obvious.”

Thomas Hardy 1840 – 1928

Far from the Madding CrowdThe Return of the Native“Time changes everything

except something within us which is always surprised by change.”

Nathaniel Hawthorne 1804 – 1864

The Scarlet LetterThe House of the Seven

Gables“Happiness is a butterfly, which

when pursued, is always just beyond your grasp, but which, if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you.”

Joseph Heller 1923 – 1999

Catch-22“The question is: what is a

sane man to do in an insane society?”

Ernest Hemingway 1899 – 1961

A Farewell to ArmsThe Sun Also RisesFor Whom the Bell Tolls“There is nothing noble in being

superior to your fellow men. True nobility lies in being superior to your former self.”

O. Henry 1862 – 1910

The Gift of the MagiThe Last LeafThe Furnished Room“We can’t buy one minute of

time with cash; if we could, rich people would live longer.”

Homer BEFORE 800 BC

IliadOdessy“Everything is more beautiful

because we’re doomed. You will never be lovelier than you are now. We will never be here again.”

Victor Hugo 1802 – 1885

Les MiserablesThe Hunchback

of Notre-Dame“Go out in the world and work

like money doesn’t matter, sing as if no one is listening, love as if you have never been hurt, and dance as if no one is watching.”

The Brothers Grimm JACOB 1785 – 1863; WILHELM 1786 – 1859

Hansel and GretelCinderellaSnow WhiteRapunzelThe Golden GooseThe Frog Prince“How often when we are

comfortable, we begin to long for something new!”

– Jacob Grimm

“He who helped you when you were in trouble ought not afterwards be despised by you”

– Wilhelm Grimm

Joseph Conrad 1857 – 1924

Heart of Darkness“My task, which I am trying to

achieve is, by the power of the written word, to make you hear, to make you feel — it is, before all, to make you see.”

James Fenimore Cooper 1789 – 1851

The Last of the Mohicans“There is a pleasure in the

pathless woods, There is a rapture on the lonely shore.”

Stephen Crane 1871 – 1900

The Red Badge of Courage“A man said to the universe:

‘Sir, I exist!’ ‘However,’ replied the universe. ‘The fact has not created in me a sense of obligation.’”

Michael Crichton 1942 – 2008

Jurassic ParkThe Andromeda StrainLost World“You think you can destroy the

planet? What intoxicating vanity… We’ve been residents here for the blink of an eye. If we’re gone tomorrow, the earth will not miss us.”

Dante Alighieri 1265 – 1321

The Divine Comedy“I care not where my body may

take me as long as my soul is embarked on a meaningful journey.”

Daniel Defoe 1660 – 1731

Robinson Crusoe“It is better to have a lion at the

head of an army of sheep, than a sheep at the head of an army of lions.”

Charles Dickens 1812 – 1870

A Christmas CarolGreat ExpectationsDavid CopperfieldOliver TwistThe Pickwick PapersBleak HouseHard TimesThe Old Curiosity ShopNicholas NicklebyOur Mutual Friend“The most important thing in

life is to stop saying ‘I wish’ and start saying ‘I will.’ Consider nothing impossible, then treat possibilities as probabilities.”

Fyodor Dostoevsky 1821 – 1881

Crime and PunishmentThe Brothers Karamazov“The best way to keep a prisoner

from escaping is to make sure he never knows he’s in prison.”

Arthur Conan Doyle 1859 – 1930

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

The Lost WorldThe Hound of the

BaskervillesA Study in Scarlet“The world is full of obvious

things which nobody by any chance ever observes.”

Dr. Seuss 1904 – 1991

The Cat in the HatGreen Eggs and HamHow the Grinch Stole

Christmas!Horton Hears a Who!The Lorax“When something bad happens

you have three choices. You can either let it define you, let it destroy you, or you can let it strengthen you.”

Alexandre Dumas 1802 – 1870

The Three MusketeersThe Count of Monte Cristo“Life is a storm, my young

friend. You will bask in the sunlight one moment, be shattered on the rocks the next. What makes you a man is what you do when that storm comes.”

George Eliot 1819 – 1880

MiddlemarchThe Mill on the Floss“What destroys us most

effectively is not a malign fate but our own capacity for self-deception and for degrading our own best self.”

T. S. Eliot 1888 – 1965

The Waste LandOld Possum’s Book

of Practical CatsMurder in the Cathedral“Most of the trouble in the world

is caused by people wanting to be important.”

William Faulkner 1897 – 1962

As I Lay DyingA Rose for EmilyAbsalom, Absalom!The Sound and the Fury“People to whom sin is just

a matter of words, to them salvation is just words too.”

Henry Fielding 1707 – 1754

The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling

“I am content; that is a blessing greater than riches; and he to whom that is given need ask no more.”