County holds off $460K request for 2015 concert - Tooele ...

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BULLETIN BOARD B6 CLASSIFIEDS C4 HOMETOWN B1 OBITUARIES A8 KID SCOOP B8 SPORTS A10 INSIDE Source: www.airquality.utah.gov Good Good Good AIR QUALITY Thursday Friday Saturday T RANSCRIPT B ULLETIN T OOELE THURSDAY November 20, 2014 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 121 No. 50 $1.00 SERVING T OOELE COUNTY SINCE 1894 Rush Valley Ophir Grantsville Tooele Lake Po Bauer Stockton Pine Ca Stansbury Erda 46/29 47/32 48/30 46/33 47/30 47/30 39/26 47/32 49/32 WEATHER See complete forecast on A9 THS art auction to benefit local food bank See A2 GHS students elect to stage major Broadway production See A4 FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Rush Valley resident Shannon Sagers fills up her car in Tooele City on Monday after- noon. Tooele City wants the state to review a gas tax increase, one of several pro- posals intended to raise road maintenance funding, during the legislative session. by Tim Gillie STAFF WRITER Country Explosion will have to wait to find out if it will get $460,000 in local tourism funds for a concert in 2015. The Tooele County Commission approved $103,500 of tourism fund grants at their Tuesday night meeting, but their vote didn’t include money for Country Explosion. The decision on the concert promoter’s $460,000 request, along with a request from Miller Motorsports Park, were tabled until an undetermined future commission meeting. “I want some time to mull over Country Explosion’s request and talk to the interested parties,” said Tooele County Commissioner Shawn Milne. The Tooele County Tourism Advisory Board reviewed a total of $824,735 of grant requests, and looked for projects that will promote tourism in the county, according to John Cluff, tourism advisory board chairman. But the board made no deci- sion on Country Explosion or MMP’s requests. Cluff said the advisory board was split on Country Explosion. “So we leave that up to you County holds off $460K request for 2015 concert by Emma Penrod STAFF WRITER The Tooele City Council passed a resolution Wednesday night to send out letters in support of a state-wide initiative to increase taxes for road maintenance. Tooele City now joins dozens of other cities and townships in the state that have come together under the Utah League of Cities and Towns to exert pressure on the Utah Legislature to pass what they believe is a long-overdue funding increase. Twenty years have passed since the last increase, said Tooele City Councilman Scott Wardle. Since then, he said, the state has Tooele City joins effort to get more funds for roads by Tim Gillie STAFF WRITER Like a giant redwood tree tumbling to the forest floor, the last Democrat stand- ing in Tooele County fell over on election day. It is now official. Republican Paul Wimmer will replace retiring Tooele County Sheriff Frank Park. Park was the last Democrat to hold an elected office in the county. The vote tally for the Nov. 4 general elec- tion was canvassed and approved by the Tooele County Commission on Tuesday. None of the Democratic candidates in the county were able to wrestle a seat away from the Republican party, leav- ing local Democrats to contemplate their future in a county now dominated by Republicans. “It’s not over,” said Gillian Johns-Young, Democrats trudge on after election losses FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO John Cluff, chairman of the Tooele County Tourism Advisory Board, speaks to the Tooele County Commission about the proj- ects approved or denied for grants from the board. Kortnee Hansen and Skylee Anderson (above) talk turkey before last night’s Tooele County Turkey show. Both girls had turkeys up for auction at the show at THS. Third grader Parker Hansen (left) picks up his 26 pound turkey before the bird was auctioned off. TALKIN’ TURKEY PHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE Possible tourism tax dollars for Country Explosion, Miller Motorsports Park tabled; $103K OK’d for other projects SEE CONCERT PAGE A7 Nominations are being accepted for the annual Tooele Transcript Bulletin Christmas Benefit Fund. Each nomination should include a thorough description of the hardships the person or family is facing, as well as an explanation of how the fund could help them this Christmas. Last year’s benefit fund helped the Hill family, which had been struggling through layoffs and had to live in a camping trailer for more than a year. Transcript Bulletin readers donated more than $3,000, the first month of rent and security deposit on a newly leased apart- ment, and dozens of gifts for the Hills and their four children. Please send nominations and contact information by Tuesday, Dec. 9 to the Tooele Transcript Bulletin Christmas Benefit Fund at P.O. Box 390, Tooele, Utah 84074, or email nominations to [email protected] with “Benefit Fund” in the subject line. Nominations accepted for annual Benefit Fund SEE DEMOCRATS PAGE A9 SEE ROADS PAGE A5 Photos recap strong SHS fall sports season See B1

Transcript of County holds off $460K request for 2015 concert - Tooele ...

BULLETIN BOARD B6

CLASSIFIEDS C4

HOMETOWN B1

OBITUARIES A8

KID SCOOP B8

SPORTS A10

INSIDE

Source: www.airquality.utah.gov

Good

Good

Good

AIR QUALITYThursday

Friday

Saturday

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTTOOELE

THURSDAY November 20, 2014 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 121 No. 50 $1.00

SERVING TOOELE COUNTY

SINCE 1894

SNOWPACKSnow Water Equivalent as of 12 a.m. Wednesday

Rocky Basin Mining VernonSettlement Fork Creek

Source: Utah Natural Resources Conservation Services

Tooele Valley-Vernon Creek Basin

Snowcover 0.4 1.2 0.3Average 3.2 1.9 0.5Percent of average 12% 63% 60%

UV INDEX

Snowfall (in inches)

Last Month Season Week to date to date

The Sun Rise Set

The Moon Rise Set

UV INDEX

The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10Very High; 11+ Extreme

ALMANACTemperatures

Precipitation (in inches)

Daily Temperatures

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELESUN AND MOON

UTAH WEATHER

Last Normal Month Normal Year Normal Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D

Salt Lake City

Ogden

Logan

Provo

Vernal

Price

Tooele

Nephi

Manti

Green River

RichfieldMoab

Cedar CitySt. George Kanab

Blanding

BeaverHanksville

Delta

GrouseCreek

Roosevelt

Clive

Rush Valley

Wendover

Gold Hill

Vernon

Ophir

Grantsville

Tooele

Lake Point

Bauer

Stockton

Pine Canyon

Stansbury ParkErda

Knolls

Ibapah

Dugway

High Low

Eureka

Friday 7:22 a.m. 5:07 p.m.Saturday 7:23 a.m. 5:07 p.m.Sunday 7:24 a.m. 5:06 p.m.Monday 7:26 a.m. 5:06 p.m.Tuesday 7:27 a.m. 5:05 p.m.Wednesday 7:28 a.m. 5:05 p.m.Thursday 7:29 a.m. 5:04 p.m.

Friday 6:20 a.m. 4:54 p.m.Saturday 7:23 a.m. 5:40 p.m.Sunday 8:24 a.m. 6:33 p.m.Monday 9:22 a.m. 7:31 p.m.Tuesday 10:15 a.m. 8:34 p.m.Wednesday 11:03 a.m. 9:41 p.m.Thursday 11:46 a.m. 10:49 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

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F Sa Su M Tu W Th

Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed

FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY

A blend of sun and clouds

48 30

Cloudy with a few showers; snow at

night

46 30

Cloudy; snow at night

40 24

Clouds limiting sun

41 26

Sunshine and some clouds

48

Mostly cloudy

42 28 29

Colder with sun and some clouds

47 14TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER

Shown is Friday’s weather. Temperatures are Friday’s highs and Friday night’s

lows.

High/Low past week 49/13Normal high/low past week 49/31Average temp past week 28.0Normal average temp past week 40.0

Statistics for the week ending Nov. 19.

WEATHER

See complete forecast on A9

THS art auction to benefit local food bankSee A2

GHS students elect to stage major Broadway productionSee A4

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Rush Valley resident Shannon Sagers fills up her car in Tooele City on Monday after-noon. Tooele City wants the state to review a gas tax increase, one of several pro-posals intended to raise road maintenance funding, during the legislative session.

by Tim Gillie

STAFF WRITER

Country Explosion will have to wait to find out if it will get $460,000 in local tourism funds for a concert in 2015.

The Tooele County Commission approved $103,500 of tourism fund grants at their Tuesday night meeting, but their vote didn’t include money for Country Explosion.

The decision on the concert promoter’s $460,000 request, along with a request from Miller Motorsports Park, were tabled until an undetermined future commission meeting.

“I want some time to mull over Country Explosion’s request and talk to the interested parties,” said Tooele County Commissioner Shawn Milne.

The Tooele County Tourism Advisory Board reviewed a total

of $824,735 of grant requests, and looked for projects that will promote tourism in the county, according to John Cluff, tourism advisory board chairman.

But the board made no deci-sion on Country Explosion or MMP’s requests. Cluff said the advisory board was split on Country Explosion.

“So we leave that up to you

County holds off $460K request for 2015 concert

by Emma Penrod

STAFF WRITER

The Tooele City Council passed a resolution Wednesday night to send out letters in support of a state-wide initiative to increase taxes for road maintenance.

Tooele City now joins dozens of other cities and townships in the state that have come together

under the Utah League of Cities and Towns to exert pressure on the Utah Legislature to pass what they believe is a long-overdue funding increase.

Twenty years have passed since the last increase, said Tooele City Councilman Scott Wardle. Since then, he said, the state has

Tooele City joinseffort to get morefunds for roads

by Tim Gillie

STAFF WRITER

Like a giant redwood tree tumbling to the forest floor, the last Democrat stand-ing in Tooele County fell over on election day.

It is now official. Republican Paul

Wimmer will replace retiring Tooele County Sheriff Frank Park. Park was the last Democrat to hold an elected office in the county.

The vote tally for the Nov. 4 general elec-tion was canvassed and approved by the Tooele County Commission on Tuesday.

None of the Democratic candidates in

the county were able to wrestle a seat away from the Republican party, leav-ing local Democrats to contemplate their future in a county now dominated by Republicans.

“It’s not over,” said Gillian Johns-Young,

Democrats trudge on after election losses

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

John Cluff, chairman of the Tooele County Tourism Advisory Board, speaks to the Tooele County Commission about the proj-ects approved or denied for grants from the board.

Kortnee Hansen and Skylee Anderson (above) talk turkey before last night’s Tooele County Turkey show. Both girls had turkeys up for auction at the show at THS. Third grader Parker Hansen (left) picks up his 26 pound turkey before the bird was auctioned off.

TALKIN’ TURKEYPHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE

T

Possible tourism tax dollars for Country Explosion, Miller Motorsports Park tabled; $103K OK’d for other projects

SEE CONCERT PAGE A7 ➤

Nominations are being accepted for the annual Tooele Transcript Bulletin Christmas Benefit Fund.

Each nomination should include a thorough description of the hardships the person or family is facing, as well as an explanation of how the fund could help them this Christmas.

Last year’s benefit fund helped the Hill family, which had been struggling through layoffs and had to live in a camping trailer for more than a year.

Transcript Bulletin readers donated more than $3,000, the first month of rent and security deposit on a newly leased apart-ment, and dozens of gifts for the Hills and their four children.

Please send nominations and contact information by Tuesday, Dec. 9 to the Tooele Transcript Bulletin Christmas Benefit Fund at P.O. Box 390, Tooele, Utah 84074, or email nominations to [email protected] with “Benefit Fund” in the subject line.

Nominations acceptedfor annual Benefit Fund

SEE DEMOCRATS PAGE A9 ➤

SEE ROADS PAGE A5 ➤

Photos recap strong SHS fall sports season

See B1

FRONT PAGE A1FRONT PAGE A1

by Emma PenrodSTAFF WRITER

Tooele City is set to grow 38 acres larger with the city coun-cil’s unanimous approval of the Green Meadows annexation agreement.

The city council has voted twice in favor of the annexation located at the east end of Skyline Drive: first at the beginning of the month to pass an ordinance approving the annexation, and second on Wednesday to pass an agreement that finalizes the details of the annexation.

But Green Meadows peti-tioners aren’t out of the woods just yet. As per the agreement, they now have one year to turn over a yet-to-be-determined amount of water rights, Tooele City Attorney Roger Baker said during last night’s public hear-ing on the agreement.

Green Meadows petitioners may not bring a subdivision pro-posal to the city before the city has said water rights in hand. If the entire 38-acre property is not subdivided within a year, then the annexation agreement and ordinance will be rendered void, Baker said.

Baker said he had drafted the annexation with a built-in one-year time limit as a protection to the city. He said Green Meadows petitioner Mathew Arbshay had told him that he had just 12-acre feet-worth of water rights available to give the city and needed more time to acquire the additional water rights.

While the city has not yet determined the final amount of water rights it will request, esti-mates by Arbshay and Tooele City have put that number in the range of 30-40 acre feet.

While delaying the convey-ance of water rights for up to a year means the city will have to wait longer for the water than it initially anticipated, Baker said the agreement was advanta-geous: it would allow Arbshay and his partners to have a more finalized idea of what the sub-division proposal will look like. This will allow the city to cal-culate a more accurate water requirement.

Arbshay, in an interview after the initial vote on the annexation ordinance earlier this month, said he felt that the subdivision process was a more appropriate time to deal with issues of water rights conveyance than during annexation.

“It’s OK to be discussed, that this is what they’re expecting,” he said. “But handling the water right is not to be handled at the time of annexation. When you are going to use it and develop it, then you look at water rights. It’s not a thing to bring up at this time at all.

“It should happen when the land is going to be developed,” he continued. “If we’re just going to let it sit, no need to get water right. There are a lot of lands in the city where they don’t have any water rights on them.”

Arbshay is currently work-ing with an engineer to draft a

subdivision proposal that calls for the 38-acre property to be divided into 47 large residential lots.

In addition to the water rights requirement, the annexation

agreement was also conditioned on the timely closure of a well that currently exists within the Green Meadows property and could interfere with a nearby city well, Baker said.

The agreement also requires Green Meadows’ partners to dedicate a steeply sloped por-tion of the property to green space, either by placing a con-servation easement on the prop-

erty or by deeding the property directly to the city. The slope could become a hazard were it to be developed, Baker [email protected]

Tooele council sets conditions for Green Meadows annexation

by Tim GillieSTAFF WRITER

The Tooele High School com-mons area will turn into an art gallery that serves hot soup on Friday night.

Artwork by THS pottery, pho-tography and art students and faculty will be displayed while students serve bowls of hot soup. Band and orchestra students will provide music throughout the

evening. The evening will also include a silent art auction.

The fourth annual Hot Soup, Warm Hearts night will raise funds and donations to help Valley Behavioral Health’s Tooele Resource Center that assists fam-ilies in crisis.

The entry fee is two cans or more of soup for one person, or four cans of soup or a new or used blanket for a group of two people.

The fee includes one bowl of hot soup per person. Additional bowls of soup are available for $2.

All proceeds from entry fees, soup sales, and the auction will be given to the Tooele Resource Center that assists families in crisis

Local restaurants, including Jim’s Diner, the Stockton Miners Cafe, Dimitri’s and Dairy Delight, are donating soup, according to Chris Wilcox, THS pottery teach-er and one of the organizers of the event.

Along with the donated restau-rant soups, some faculty mem-bers will also bring their favorite homemade soup, Wilcox said.

Pottery students have been

busy making bowls that go with the evening’s soup theme that will be sold at the fundraiser.

Photography and art students, along with some faculty mem-bers, are also donating items to the silent auction, Wilcox said.

Last year, Hot Soup, Warm Hearts brought in around $2,000 for the resource center.

Hot Soups, Warm Hearts will be held on Friday, Nov. 21 from 5-8 p.m. at the THS commons area. Entrance is through the school’s front [email protected]

Tooele High students to display art and serve hot soup for local families in need

A2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN THURSDAY November 20, 2014

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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.

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FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Olivia Smith stands next to her drawing, “The Eye,” which won the Best of Show along with a $25 cash prize. Smith’s artwork as well as pieces from other students at Tooele High will be on display this Friday for the art department’s annual Warm Hearts - Hot Soup benefit for the Tooele Resource Center.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

A local developer is working to develop this area near Skyline Drive for housing. The property’s annexation into Tooele City was approved this month.

by Lisa ChristensenSTAFF WRITER

A Grantsville man has been sen-tenced to a partially suspended jail sentence for having inappropriate sex with a teenage girl.

Daniel Evans, 36, was sentenced Tuesday in 3rd District Court to three years in the Tooele County Detention Center, with two years and 15 days suspended. He was also sentenced to a fine and three years of probation.

Last December, Evans’ wife told a deputy from the Tooele County Sheriff’s Office that Evans had been having a sexual relationship with a girl who was 15.

The woman said one night after a party, she awoke but could not find her husband, and thought he might

be at a girlfriend’s house but checked in a camping trailer in the yard to make sure he was not there.

When she opened the trailer door, she told deputies, she heard gasping, whispering and crying. The incident made the woman suspicious, so she set up a hidden camera in the cou-ple’s bedroom.

On the video recorded in the bed-room was footage of Evans and the girl engaging in sexual activity.

Evans was charged in December 2013 with three counts of unlawful sexual activity with a minor, a third-degree felony, but pleaded guilty to three counts of sexual battery, a class A misdemeanor, in August. Tooele County Chief Deputy Attorney Gary Searle said the plea agreement was made to spare the victim from fur-ther hardship.

“The girl was already traumatized and we could get the same sentence without putting the girl through a jury trial as we could with what we got,” Searle said. “So he’s sitting on a potential three-year sentence and three years with probation. We accomplished what we needed to have accomplished without trauma-tizing the victim any more.”[email protected]

Grantsville man gets sentenced for having sex with teenage girl

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THURSDAY November 20, 2014 A3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Charlie Roberts

CONTRIBUTOR

The Tooele Running Club will gather early Thanksgiving morn-ing for its second annual Side Dish Sprint in an all-out effort to collect 1,000 pounds of food for the Tooele County Food Bank.

Winners of the morning’s races will take home various Thanksgiving dinner side dishes.

“Last year our 50 participants contributed over 300 pounds in our first Side Dish Sprint,” said event organizer Sandra Hadlock. “Our club has grown to 878 mem-bers this year, so we are shooting for 1,000 pounds.”

Runners will gather at Middle Canyon Elementary School, 751 E. 1000 North, at 7:30 a.m., where

they will participate in a 3.1 mile, 6.2 mile or 13.1 mile half-mara-thon run. The entry fee is a dona-tion to the food bank. Many local businesses have also contributed to a raffle that will be held the morning of the race.

The running club already has a commitment of just over 100 participants.

“Everyone is invited to attend and contribute to this great

cause,” Hadlock added. “It is an ideal way to kick off the holiday season and a great way to give back to the Tooele community.”

There is no membership fee for the Tooele Running Club and people may RSVP on Facebook or sign up on Eventbrite. Details of the three routes are posted on the Tooele Running page on Facebook.

Running club aims for donated food at Thanksgiving sprint

PROVO, Utah (AP)— During a speech focused heavily on reli-gion, former Republican presi-dential candidate Mitt Romney told Brigham Young University students Tuesday that being Mormon is a blessing even if it sometimes feels like a burden.

“Some folks will think you’re not Christian, some may be insulted that you don’t drink with them, and others will think you’re trying to be better than them by not swearing,” he said. “But I can affirm this: your fel-low members of the church will be a blessing to you that far more than compensates.”

Romney delivered the speech, titled “Life Lessons from the Front,” to about 15,000 students at the Marriott Center on the campus in Provo. The university is owned by Salt Lake City-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and nearly all stu-dents are practicing Mormons. Romney graduated from BYU in 1971.

He declared his love for the religion and its members, and told them that being faithful Latter-day Saints will bring incomparable happiness, now and forever.

He started his speech with a joke about a new essay from LDS church leaders that openly acknowledged that Mormon church founder Joseph Smith had dozens of wives, includ-ing a teen bride, during the early days of Mormonism when polygamy was practiced.

He listed off a series of things that had changed since he grad-uated from BYU with the final one being, “Back then, Emma was Joseph Smith’s only wife.”

That drew laughs and applause from an adoring audi-ence. The former governor of Massachusetts is well liked in Utah, where he served as the chair of the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City.

Romney spoke about his failed run for president with a mixture of humor and serious reflection. He didn’t mention anything about future plans for politics.

“In case you haven’t heard, I lost,” he said. “Actually, I’d pre-fer to say that I won the silver medal.”

He reflected back on the day after the election, saying, “The cheers were gone, replaced by the agonizing reappraisal by others of what had gone wrong.”

He said the election rein-forced his belief that God doesn’t “always intervene in the affairs of men to make things work out the way we would like them to.”

“More often than not, our secular affairs are up to us. Don’t count on God to save you from the consequences of your decisions or to arrange earthly affairs to work in your favor,” Romney said.

But, he also urged students not to become enveloped by the “twists and turns of secular life” that threaten to overshadow who they are.

“You are not defined by sec-ular measures,” Romney said. “You are a child of a Heavenly Father who loves you. You are His work and His glory.”

Romney speaks to BYU students

FILE PHOTO

Tooele Running Club is holding a fundraiser for the Tooele County Food Bank on Thanksgiving.

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THURSDAY November 20, 2014A4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

by Emma PenrodSTAFF WRITER

Coined originally as the “The Timeless Love Story,” Aida first premiered as an opera in Egypt and, centuries later, as an award-winning Broadway musical mod-ernized by Elton John.

Grantsville High School will open its all-student produced version of the classic romance this weekend.

Aida — both the operatic ver-sion by Giuseppe Verdi and the modernized version that GHS will perform — tells the story of the forbidden romance between a captain of the Egyptian army and a foreign princess forced into slavery in Egypt.

The first act opens shortly after Radames and his soldiers have captured a group of Nubian women, including, unbeknownst to the Egyptians, the Nubian prin-cess, Aida. Radames is immedi-ately smitten by Aida, and has her

assigned to serve the Egyptian princess, Amneris, who also hap-pens to be Radames’ fiancé.

As Aida and Radames struggle to chose between love and loy-alty to country, the plot thickens at the discovery that Pharaoh is dying, causing Pharaoh to man-date that Amneris and Radames must be wed in seven days.

Meanwhile, the Egyptians cap-ture Aida’s father, prompting Aida and some of her fellow slaves to begin planning an escape, and Radames’ father, Zoser, discovers his son’s affair, prompting him to order his own servants to kill Aida.

And with all that, the modern musical features a contemporary rock-inspired score and sense of humor many locals will appreci-ate, said Matt Price, director of GHS drama.

“Although it’s pretty dramatic and very romantic, it’s also very fun and the music is awesome,” he said.

It’s not common for GHS to stage a musical in the fall, Price said, but it is his policy to allow the students to produce their fall show from start to finish. It was the students who chose Aida this year, and who have seen to every detail of the production.

“They’re pretty talented kids; it’s going to be a good show,” he said. “I’m pretty excited about it.”

All roles in the play are filled by students in Price’s theater pro-duction classes. Leads include Ayssa Hendricks as Aida, Kylee Robinson as Amneris, Wyatt Naplin as Radames and Liam Donovan as Zoser.

The show will open this Thursday at 7 p.m. in the GHS auditorium, with additional showings on Nov. 21, 22 and 24, also all at 7 p.m. Tickets cost $7 for adults, $6 for students and $5 for seniors and children 11 and [email protected]

GHS to stage popular, opera-based, rock ‘n’ roll musical

FLICK PICKS

You know what I hate? When book adaptations split the last book into two parts.

Yeah, I’m talking to you, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows and Breaking Dawn — don’t even get me started on “The Hobbit” with its three-part shenanigans.

And oh, yeah, you too, Hunger Games.

But where most two-part fina-les tend to feel stretched and thin, “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1” remarkably feels more whole and intricate than the first half of its source material did.

When we left Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence) at the end of last year’s “Catching Fire,” she had been rescued from the Hunger Games arena by Gale

(Liam Hemsworth) and Haymitch (Woody Harrelson). But Peeta (Josh Hutcherson) had been left behind. Katniss, safe in the bun-ker that makes up District 13, is now wracked with guilt over Peeta’s abandonment, especially since she had vowed to protect him.

District 13’s leader, President Coin (Julianne Moore), wants Katniss to serve as the face of the rising revolution against the Capitol and President Snow (Donald Sutherland). Katniss agrees, on the condition that the tributes captured by the Capitol, including Peeta, be rescued as soon as possible and are par-doned of any crimes they might be forced to commit — a tough sell for Coin after Peeta makes increasingly inflammatory state-ments against the revolution on Capitol television with the ever-entertaining Caesar Flickerman (Stanley Tucci).

But with a little convincing from Hunger-Games-designer-turned-revolution-publicity-pro Plutarch Heavensbee (Philip Seymour Hoffman), Katniss gets her deal.

Propaganda like this needs all the help it can get, so Plutarch gathers the old gang: Haymitch, Gale, Effie Trinket (Elizabeth Banks) and Beetee (Jeffrey Wright) and Finnick Odair

(Sam Claflin), plus a camera crew (Natalie Dormer, Evan Ross, Elden Henson and Wes Chatham).

The propaganda works — the revolution spreads and other dis-tricts start fighting back against the Capitol. But with every victory for the revolution, the Capitol’s noose gets a little tighter, the ret-ribution more fierce, and Katniss worries more and more for Peeta’s safety.

One thing this movie does spectacularly well is depicting the tug and pull between honest intentions and publicity stunts with the revolution. Katniss goes out to one of the districts hit by the Capitol and visits a hospital filled with wounded people.

The footage from the trip is subsequently cut into video clips promoting the rebel cause. Sure, we know Katniss was being sin-cere, but would everyone else, or would some think she was pandering? It’s like the reverse of Katniss and Peeta’s romance in the beginning of “Catching Fire” — we know it’s a sham, but not everyone does.

Another thing the film does a good job at is showing the intense manipulation from both sides being worked on by this teen-age girl. The book is told from Katniss’ point of view, making much of the politics a thing we read about between the lines,

but the film’s more third-person approach lets us have a wider look at the forces yanking at her from every direction. Lawrence again delivers enough nuance to make Katniss’ struggle hit home.

Really, though, the same could be said for virtually every main character, and it’s hard to find a weak link. And Hoffman . . . oh, Hoffman. Could that man act. Hutcherson also does a great job of gradually showing the wear on his character as the pressure in the Capitol increases.

Director Francis Lawrence hasn’t let that wealth of talent go to waste, and brings plenty of his own to the table. Perhaps the most emotional scenes are those without headlining talent in them — district residents rising up on their own, or a mass evacuation, for example.

In short, this movie is very well done. From the first half of the weakest book of the Hunger Games trilogy, “Mockingjay Part 1” has risen to be the best film of the series yet. I’m even excited for Part 2.

‘The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1’ rises to the best film of the series yet

FLICK AT A GLANCEGrade: ARated: PG-13Time: 123 minutesOpens Friday

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Kylee Robinson as Amneris is surrounded by handmaids during a dress rehearsal for Granstville High’s upcoming production of Aida. The show will open this Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Grantsville High School auditorium, with additional showings on Nov. 21, 22 and 24, also all at 7 p.m.

COURTESY OF LIONSGATE

Jennifer Lawrence stars as Katniss Everdeen, the face in front of a rising revolution against the opressive Capitol, in “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1.”

Lisa ChristensenSTAFF WRITER

Li

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A5THURSDAY November 20, 2014 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

OUTDOOR ADVENTURE

The sky was clear and icy in the desert that morning. I couldn’t make out the

detailed features of the moun-tains yet, but the dark outlines of Davis Mountain, and the Onaqui and Simpson ranges were visible as their summit ridges burned with a dull orange from the sunrise.

While looking out across Porter Rockwell Country on the Pony Express Trail, I wondered if “Old Port” ever admired such a desert morning. I also thought about how cold it was, and how the men and women who lived here in the 1800s coped with frigid temperatures.

Red Pine Mountain also over-looks Porter Rockwell Country, and is one of my favorites. Part of the Sheeprock Mountains, Red Pine’s west face has a series of gray limestone cliff bands. They are an intimidating, yet fun obstacle for the hiker. They also feature a pocket of low-elevation Douglas fir forests.

Rockwell’s cabin was prob-ably located somewhere west of Red Pine Mountain, between the Sheeprock and Simpson Ranges on Government Creek. If I had to guess, some of the logs cut for his cabin probably came from “Log Canyon” on Red Pine Mountain.

Henry Jacob “Doc” Faust, an original Pony Express Trail rider and station master for Rush Valley and Meadow Creek sta-tions, told a morbid and sad tale about a band of friendly Goshute Indians who were camped near Rockwell’s cabin.

According to Faust, the Indians were surprised and mas-sacred by subordinate officer of Col. Patrick Edward Connor and Capt. Samuel P. Smith. Faust’s

account of the event is as fol-lows:

“I was living at Rush Valley when Capt. Smith and his Company came to Rockwell’s Ranch and camped. For some cause or another, they sur-rounded and killed the men, women and children that were camped in the cedars nearby. The soldiers only saved one, that was Pe-Anum’s young squaw. Capt. Smith took her to his tent, where I saw her, and I went over to see what was going on. She told me that he made her sleep with him and she begged me most piteously to take her away. I talked with Smith and he told me that he was holding her in order that she would tell where the rest of the Indians were. I will never forget the poor woman as I left, crying as though her heart would break. It afterwards transpired that Smith kept her as long as he wanted her and then sent Spanish Joe off with her. She was afterwards found with a bullet in her head. I visited the dead Indians camp and found them unburied. I rec-ognized the father and brother of Pe-Anum. It was a ghastly sight. They were all swollen up to twice their natural size, one mother hugging her little papoose to her breast as tight as though she would shield it from the destroyer. There are more savages than Indians.”

I wonder where Rockwell was when this event took place and

what he thought about it. I can’t know a man’s mind who died more than 100 years ago, but he may have been glad; he was a guide for Connor’s punitive expedition against the Shoshone along the Bear River. I also won-der, while hiking alone in the desert near Government Creek, if the wind in the junipers isn’t timeless whispers from such sad events.

Log Canyon and Red Pine Mountain are worthy destina-tions for the desert explorer. To get there, follow the Pony Express Trail west from Lookout Pass approximately 7.3 miles into the middle of the southern end of Skull Valley. There you will find a junction with a well-defined north/south trending road. Turn left and head south on what is known as “Erickson Pass Road.” At approximately 4 miles, you will notice a cor-ral on the right side with a good dirt road heading west to Government Creek.

Just past the corral an old road branches off to the east and up a hill. This is the Log Canyon Road. Last time I went out there, I found a place to park my vehicle along the main road, shouldered my pack, dropped my .45 into its holster and head-ed east into the hills. I never know when I may come face-to-face with a cougar. I feel better when I’m prepared.

The road is rough and chal-lenging for vehicles, but is well defined and easy to follow on foot, mountain bike or horse-back. About 0.7 of a mile from the start point, you will junction with a north/south trending dirt road. Continue east along the bench and at 1.7 miles, you will pass a small stock pond on

the right that may or may not have water in it. There, you will come to a fork in the road. Keep left and in a short distance, you will come to a gate. You may be surprised to find that this is the Wasatch National Forest Boundary and that most of Red Pine Mountain is on national forest ground.

The road deteriorates into a steep path and then disappears in the junipers along a rocky ridge. From this point the world is yours to explore. I stayed on the ridge, summitted a minor peak at 7,368 feet, and then made my way up the cliff bands past the pocket forests and across scree rocks as the sun set one April afternoon.

I reached the 8,516 foot-high summit on consolidated snow after dark, and made a cold camp for the night. That morn-ing, the sunrise bathed the Sheeprock’s snow-capped peaks to the south in orange glow.

If you venture into the Log Canyon/Red Pine Mountain area, take plenty of water, a good map and know your limits. This is total, off-the-trail back-country stuff after you reach the end of the road. But when you walk through a stand of Douglas fir in the desert mountains, you will understand why Rockwell preferred this land to the city.

Jessop grew up exploring the mountains and deserts of Utah. He has a bachelor’s degree in geography from the University of Utah, and has traveled to all 50 states, U.S. Territories and a dozen foreign countries. He, his wife and daughter live in Stansbury Park. Follow him on Facebook (JD Jessop) for more hikes and travels.

Go to Red Pine Mountain and you’ll knowwhy Rockwell preferred to live near there

Jaromy JessopGUEST COLUMNIST

shifted the burden of funding road maintenance to Utah cities, which are unable to keep pace with their communities’ needs because they cannot raise the needed funds themselves.

Wardle said the city current-ly has to take $1.4 million, or $43 per city resident, out of its general fund to make up for the city’s lack of roads maintenance money.

“We just don’t have enough money to do our roads,” he said.

The Utah League of Cities and Towns hasn’t proposed a specific solution to the problem, but has suggested the state adopt one of two methods: either an increase in the state sales tax equivalent to roughly a quarter of a cent per every dollar spent, or an increased gas tax equivalent to five cents per gallon.

Tooele City Council Chairman Brad Pratt said he favored the proposed sales tax increase, because it would benefit even the smallest towns without gas stations, and because the sales

tax is projected to get more roads funding to municipalities.

According to documents dis-tributed to the city council on Wednesday, the sales tax increase would provide Tooele City with an estimated $1.3 million in additional roads funding in 2015, while the gas tax increase would give Tooele City just $300,000 in additional funds.

The funds would be collected by the state and then added to the funds the state distributes each year to individual munici-palities for roads maintenance. Consequently, the funds would be earmarked and could only be spent on projects such as road construction and repairs, or related projects such as the installation of sidewalks or bike lanes.

Pratt said he felt the pro-posed increases were minimal and would have little impact on residents, compared to the large benefit it could bring to Utah municipalities. According to the Utah League of Cities and Towns, the improved ability of cities to provide roads mainte-nance would reduce congestion, improve air quality and provide

greater opportunities for eco-nomic development.

But Wardle said he doesn’t necessarily want a tax increase; he just wants the city to explore possibilities that would make municipalities more able to provide adequate roads mainte-nance.

Pratt said the letter simply indicates the city’s desire that the state legislature consider an issue they reviewed, but did not pass, during their last session.

“We hope that they will listen and will act on it, though they haven’t in the past” he said. “This is becoming such a problem that we have to look at it and adjust.”

The Utah League of Cities and Towns intends to launch a $300,000 publicity campaign to drum up support for the fund-ing increase next year while the legislature is in session. While the league petitioned Tooele City to make a financial contribution toward that campaign, Tooele City did not include a commit-ment to do so in its Wednesday night [email protected]

Roads continued from page A1

RENO, Nev. (AP) — A Mormon bishop in Los Angeles apolo-gized Sunday for the tone of a blog saying Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid was unworthy to enter the faith’s temples, but stood by his criticism of Reid’s stands on some issues.

Mark Paredes’ blog, titled “Good Riddance to Harry Reid, the Mormon Senate Leader,” drew criticism from the church and Mormon Democrats after it was published Wednesday in a Jewish newspaper.

He called Reid an “embar-rassment” to the church and expressed his belief that Democrats’ support of same-sex marriage, abortion rights and gambling runs contrary to positions of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

“I do apologize for the tone of the article, for giving the impres-sion that I was criticizing Sen. Reid in my role as an LDS bish-op, and for implying that I am in a position to judge the senator’s

temple worthiness,” Paredes told The Associated Press by email.

"However, I can’t apologize for criticizing his advocacy of cer-tain issues and on behalf of cer-tain interests ... Any criticism I had of Senator Reid was based on his actions (e.g., defense of the gaming industry, advocacy of a certain social agenda), not his political affiliation,” he added.

Reid spokeswoman Kristen Orthman did not immediately respond to a request for com-ment.

Crystal Young-Otterstrom of Salt Lake City, vice chair of LDS Democrats of America, said she accepts Paredes’ apol-ogy but does not think it goes far enough. The group has chapters in 10 states.

If the bishop is truly contrite, she said, he should meet with Mormon Democrats and be edu-cated on why they chose their political affiliation.

“’He ought to be apologiz-ing for saying that Mormons

and Democrats can’t co-exist when clearly we can,” Young-Otterstrom said. “We are Democrats because of our Mormon beliefs and not in spite on them.”

Many notable Mormon fig-ures, including James E. Faust, Hugh B. Brown, Steven E. Snow and Larry J. Echohawk, chose to be Democrats, she added.

The church, in a statement, said it was “entirely inappropri-ate” for church officers to use their titles while publishing such political views.

Paredes noted in a disclaimer at the end of his essay that he was expressing his personal opinion, but he identified himself in the blog as a bishop.

Reid will lose his position as Senate majority leader in January after Republicans took control of the Senate in Tuesday’s election. No other Mormon has held a higher elective national office.

Mormon bishop apologizes over anti-Reid blog

If it happens here, read about it here. TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINA6 THURSDAY November 20, 2014

SALT LAKE CITY (AP)— Wine, beer and spirits are not flying off the shelves of Utah state liquor stores as often as officials had hoped, according to a report released Tuesday by Utah’s state auditor.

The report presented to Utah’s liquor control board Tuesday morning shows that

from mid-2012 to early 2014, only 13 of 44 stores met a goal of selling and restocking all inventory every month.

In the Salt Lake City sub-urb of Murray, 90 percent of the inventory is sold at least once a month. In the south-western Utah city of Hurricane, with about 14,500 people, the

state liquor store sells only 40 percent of its inventory every month.

Utah’s Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control had set the inventory goal to cut the cost of holding products.

The audit released Tuesday is part of new routine oversight of the alcohol agency follow-

ing reports of mismanagement several years ago.

Audits in 2011 found years of mismanagement at the agency and led to the firing or resigna-tion of seven top department executives.

The new report from Utah State Auditor John Dougall found no major concerns and

zeroed in managing store inven-tories and cutting employee turnover at state liquor stores.

Dougall’s office suggest-ed liquor officials tailor their inventories to meet consumer demands and maximize space.

For example, liquor stores could receive high-demand products twice a week instead

of once a week and cut their stock of products that aren’t selling as fast.

Dougall’s office said sell-ing the entire inventory every month is a reasonable goal, though they noted other indus-tries, such as grocery stores, don’t sell their inventories as quickly.

DABC director Sal Petilos said that since the auditor’s review wrapped up in February, the liquor department has retooled their ordering system.

Petilos said 31 stores now meet the goal, which they may adjust need to adjust for stores such as the Hurricane location.

Jay Yahne with The Hive Winery in Layton said officials shouldn’t focus solely on how fast products move through the stores.

“That means that you’re only going to sell discount, mass-produced alcohol in Utah,” he told The Associated Press. “If you go to our liquor stores, most of what we sell is mass-produced, not artisan prod-ucts.”

Yahne said craft products like his local wine are more expen-sive and don’t sell as quickly.

With small-scale production and taxes and fees imposed by Utah, Yahne said local winer-ies and distilleries can’t com-pete with the prices offered by big, out-of-state brands such as Robert Mondavi and Kendall-Jackson or Jim Beam.

David Gladwell, chairman of the DABC governing commis-sion, said officials don’t want to waste store space but are sen-sitive to the concerns of Utah makers of wine and spirits.

“They’re a little higher end and aren’t going to turn over quite as well, but they’re out-standing products and some-what in demand, not maybe as high as cheaper products.”

Gladwell said the agency tries to balance high demand with specialty preferences, and that’s why they allow special orders where customers can request a case of an item not stocked in state stores.

Audit: Utah liquor stores not selling fast enough

A6

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A7THURSDAY November 20, 2014 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

OUT & ABOUT

As a journalist, I spend my entire day working with amazing, talented,

hardworking, good people. And I like them.

Then something happens, or I stumble upon something that makes those same people I admire look bad, and I am under an ethical obligation to report it to the public.

Here’s an example. While working in New York, I was assigned a feature story that required a series of interviews with the subject, the owner of a long-time local business.

The subject of the profile was open, easygoing and charismatic, and I liked her. We became friends. Then, as I continued my research on her business, one of her col-leagues told me about a series of complaints from some of her clients.

I went to my editor, dis-traught at what I had discov-ered, but she confirmed what I had feared — we had to include the complaints in the article. The first tenet of the jour-nalistic code of ethics, which is maintained by a national nonprofit called the Society of

Professional Journalists, calls on journalists everywhere to “seek truth and report it.”

To bury information of which we are aware, however unflat-tering it may be, is a serious breech of professional conduct.

We couldn’t consider our-selves fair, honest, unbiased journalists if we buried the neg-ative side of the story. The story ran. The source was devastated. I thought we were friends, she said.

I run into similar situations on a fairly regular basis at the Transcript Bulletin, especially because we are a local paper and I have the opportunity to work with the same people time and time again.

I once had a member of the city council preface a request by saying “I know I’m not you’re favorite city councilman.”

I attempted humor in reply.

“Well, you’re not my least favorite,” I joked.

But inside, it got me think-ing. The more I thought, the more I realized I liked all of them. Brad Pratt, the council chairman, is always studious of the issues at hand and has thoroughly weighed all the options before coming to a conclusion. Dave McCall isn’t afraid to question the consen-sus and voice unpopular opin-ions. I have always admired Debbie Winn’s dedication and loyalty, and recently learned she also has a great singing voice. Scott Wardle is deeply passionate about what he does and always stands up for what he believes. And Steve Pruden has a great sense of humor. His quick wit has helped me through many a long, boring meeting about industrial sub-divisions.

Because I like the people on the city council — and actually everyone I’ve come across in the process of researching and writing articles — a big part of me wants to be friends with all of them. I want to write nice things and tell everyone how awesome the people of Tooele

really are.And that’s where journal-

ism so often gets in the way. Because someday I might come across something that makes someone look bad, and I will be ethically bound to report it. I will go home and agonize over how to best weigh some other tenets of the code — how to best “minimize harm” while I also “act independently” of the various forces that will try to influence how and if I tell the truth.

Then after we’ve attempted to report the story as carefully as we humanly can, the story will run.

Just know that when that day comes, it’s not personal. I still like you. And while I under-stand how such an article can hurt, I hope we can see that we are both just trying to live the principles in which we believe and, consequently, continue to operate from a place of mutual respect.

For more information about the journalistic code of ethics, please visit [email protected]

When it comes to friends, journalism can really get in the way of keeping them

Emma PenrodSTAFF WRITER

to decide,” he told the commis-sioners.

While Country Explosion is seeking funds for its 2015 concert, it still has bills with the county for the 2014 concert that are unpaid, county officials said.

Tooele County is waiting pay-ment of $36,800 for sheriff’s office and dispatch services for 2014 from Country Explosion.

The county is also expecting to recover $53,000 from Country Explosion’s insurance company for damage to the baseball field at Deseret Peak Complex.

And the commissioners approved at Tuesday night’s meet-ing a $103,000 payment to Staker Parsons Companies for work on the additional parking lot south of SR-112 from Deseret Peak. County officials claim that Country Explosion was supposed to pay the bill, but didn’t.

Some audience members at Tuesday’s meeting were perplexed at Country Explosion’s request for more tourism funds from the county.

“I know you need to vote on it,” said Mike Garrard. “But I don’t get why we are even considering the possibility of giving money to this company.”

Danny Marz also questioned the need to take a lengthy look at giv-ing money to Country Explosion.

“There are other companies that would come in and do this [put on a concert] and pay their bills,” Marz said, “I don’t know why we are even talking to these guys.”

The county commission gave Country Explosion $400,000 ear-lier this year to help market the 2014 four-day concert that was held in July.

Allocations of tourism tax funds recommended by the advisory board and approved by the county commission for this year included: $60,000 to the Tooele County Parks and Recreation Department for trail and campsite improvements; $10,000 to the Pioneer Museum Complex; $10,000 for the Tooele County Fair; $7,500 for Historic Wendover Airfield; $5,000 for the Daughters of Utah Pioneers; $5,000 for the Iosepa Historical Association; $3,000 for the

Benson Gristmill Performing Arts Foundation; $2,000 for the Festival of the Old West; and $1,000 for the Grantsville Rodeo Team.

A $45,000 grant request from the Tooele County Chamber of Commerce for printing brochures to be used to promote tourism was put on hold, pending further details of the chamber’s plans, according to Cluff.

The county commission also tabled a decision on a grant request from Miller Motorsports Park.

“Miller Motorsports Park asked for $100,000,” said Cluff, “They already asked for $100,000 earlier and we gave them $50,000. We told them that was all they were going to get.”

The money allocated Tuesday night was from 2013 tourism tax revenue. The money was not dis-tributed in 2013 because of the county’s financial troubles, Cluff said.

In May the county commission approved recommendations from the advisory board for $182,753 in allocations of 2014 tourism tax revenue.

The tourism tax fund receives revenue from a 1.0 percent tax on food purchased in restaurants and a 3.5 percent tax on lodging in motels and hotels.

In 2014, the county budget antic-ipates a collection of $300,000 in transient room taxes and $455,000 in restaurant taxes for a combined total of $755,000.

In addition to the advisory board grants, other expenses included in the 2014 TRT fund budget were $400,000 for 2014 Country Explosion; $192,000 in special projects to be approved by the county commission; $125,000 for the county fair; and $130,000 towards principal for the bond that paid for the convention center at Deseret Peak Complex.

Concert continued from page A1

TBP FILE PHOTO

The Tooele County Commission on Tuesday night Ok’d $60,000 from the county’s tourism tax fund for the county’s parks and recreation department. The money is intended for trail and campsite improvements in the county.

A7

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A8 THURSDAY November 20, 2014TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

OBITUARIES

Marjorie Lince Iverson Boswell

Our sweet mom, granny, aunt, sister, cousin, but most of all best friend, Marjorie Lince Iverson Boswell, passed away surrounded by her family at the age of 90 on November 16, 2014. She was born August 2, 1924 to Linden Richard Iverson and Alta Leony’s Hardy in Sigurd, Utah. She graduated from Richfield High in 1942. She retired from Tooele Army Depot. She was a member of the Moose and Eagle’s Lodge in Tooele and Tops in Tooele. She was also the president of the Good Sam’s Club for three years. She was a member of the Tooele 2nd Ward where she enjoyed her visiting teaching job. She enjoyed play-ing cards, bingo, camping, trav-eling and going to Wendover.

Most of all, she loved spending time with her family. She mar-ried Max Boswell and between them there were nine chil-dren; Sherrie Lynn Burr, Linden

“Butch” (Lue Rae) Burr, Charlotte (Paul) Gourley, Roger Warenski, Wanda (Wesley) Payne, Maxine (Bill) Jacobs, Judy (Dewey) Sorenson, Lee Anna Boswell,

Dee Anna (Jim) Wilkes. She leaves a big legacy of 18 grand-children, 63 great-grandchildren and 30 great-great-grandchil-dren. She is preceded in death by her parents, husband, sons Butch, Roger, Wesley, Ken, Jim and Dewey; daughters Sherrie, Judy and Lee Anna; grandchil-dren Audrey, Tira, Amanda and Shane; great-grandson Weston and great-great-grandchildren Austin and Serenity, as well as her sisters LuDean and Shirley. Viewing shall be from 11 a.m.-12:45 p.m. Friday, Nov. 21 with the funeral to follow at 1 p.m. at the Tooele North Stake Center located at 583 North 270 East. Today I say goodbye to my best friend and sweet angel. We are going to miss you mom. Please continue to watch over us until we meet again. We love you.

Pheba Elizabeth Batesel Grisso

Pheba Elizabeth “Betty” Batesel Grisso, 92, left this earth to meet her Savior and her soulmate, Lloyd Wesley Grisso, on November 14, 2014 in Morton, Washington. She was born on April 18, 1922 in Watts, Oklahoma, to Versal Hugh Batesel and Althea Alice Kane. With the oil boom the family moved to Bowlegs, Oklahoma, in 1927, where her Dad bought land and, being a carpenter, built the family home. Mom graduat-ed from Bowlegs High School in 1939. Mom and Dad were mar-ried on her 18th birthday, April 18, 1940, a marriage lasting just

shy of 71 years, with Dad’s pass-ing on January 8, 2011. Mom and Dad lived the last years of their

lives with their eldest daughter in Morton. Mom and Dad owned a cafe in Wolf, Oklahoma, until Dad and his brother Glenn went to work for the government in Benecia, California. Betty and son, Howard, joined Dad in May of 1942. Their remaining chil-dren were born in California, where they lived until 1962 when they moved to Tooele, Utah. After retirement, she lived in Murray and Moab, Utah, where she was well-known for her devotion to and expertise in teaching Bible classes. Betty was a homemaker who excelled at everything that made a great home. She was a skilled pie baker and quilter, winning ribbons from both local and state fairs. Every grandchild got a quilt from Grandma. She

was predeceased by her hus-band, Lloyd, her parents, sons: Roger — 2013 and Lloyd Lane — 1949, brothers: Robert and Ted “Shorty,” sisters; Ruth Robbins, and Clonia Faye Ivey. She is sur-vived by one son, Howard (Linda) of Medford, Oregon, and daugh-ters, Elizabeth Thames, Morton, Pheba Pannunzio, Tooele, Utah, and Loel (Bob) Ortiz, Barstow, California, and two sisters, Mary Bordelon, Florida and Verna Jennings, California, She leaves behind 10 grandchildren, 19 great-grandchildren, and 1 great-great-grandson. Graveside ser-vices will be held in Tooele, Utah on Saturday, Nov. 22 at 1 p.m.

Brent Louis HoltBrent Louis Holt passed

away peacefully in his home on November 15, 2014 from a heart attack. Brent was born on September 2, 1947 in Salt Lake City, Utah to Harold Louis Holt and Fern Louise Brown Holt. He grew up in Salt Lake City, Utah and moved to North Salt Lake in his teens. He was in the first graduating class of Viewmont High School. He married Susan Gutierrez in 1967. Together they had two daughters, Jody and Emilee, later divorced. He married Colleen Fitzgerald, she brought one daughter to the family, Sheila Rosenlund. They had two sons, Brent Jr. and Caleb. They later divorced. Brent

worked for Boise Cascade for 20 years. He later finished his edu-

cation earning a master’s degree in audiology at the University of Utah. He worked as a Speech Language Pathologist for the Tooele County School District for 12 years. Brent enjoyed his time with his friends playing poker and going to tournaments. He also enjoyed his time with his extended family, the Fitzgeralds, whom he spent many holidays and family events with. Their love and acceptance of him is greatly appreciated. Brent was preceded in death by his par-ents. He is survived by brothers Gary Holt, Mack (Rebecca) Holt, and sister Sheila (Jerry) Hurst; his children Jody (Tom) Yager, Emilee Holt, Sheila Rosenlund, Brent Jr. (Tabitha) Holt, and Caleb

(Jessica) Holt; sixteen grandchil-dren with one on the way and five great-grandchildren with one on the way. He was a loving and caring son, brother, and friend. Dad was a supportive, compas-sionate, and dedicated father. He selflessly put his needs aside for his children, considering their happiness and success his great-est reward. Visitation will be at the LDS church on 1433 E. Old Mission Rd. (7900 South) from 11 a.m.-noon Friday, Nov. 21, funer-al will follow. Graveside service at the Larkin Sunset Cemetery at 1950 E. Dimple Dale Rd. (10600 S.), Sandy. Services entrusted with Didericksen Memorial, (435) 277-0050.

Joyce Aileen HansenJoyce passed from this life

on November 10, 2014. She was born on July 25, 1932 in Cass Lake, Minnesota to Fredrick and Florence Murphy, who later moved to Utah. She has three sisters: Edythe (Sam) Oliveto, Fritzi (Larry) Romero and Coleen (Kenneth) Annis. She married Tony Busico in September of 1947; they were later divorced. They have three children: James Busico, William Busico and Teresa Busico. Joyce has one grandson, Jamie Buscio; three great-grandsons, Gaje Buscio, Bo Busico and Aries Busico; extended family that were like her granddaughters, Melissa and Richelle. She was preceded in death by her parents and two sis-ters, Edythe and Fritzi. God bless

Mother, we love you. At Joyce’s request, there will be no service. Condolences to the family may be made at premierfuneral.com.

Rebecca Harding Wickham

Rebecca Harding Wickham (Becky) was born March 12, 1924 to Josiah Frank Harding and Maime Taylor Harding in Magna, Utah. She passed peace-fully with her husband at her side November 17, 2014 after a long illness. Becky graduated from Tooele High School in Tooele, Utah, and joined the Navy in 1942. She met Walter Charles Wickham in 1945 in Dallas, Texas, and they were married on August 27, 1946 in Lakehurst, New Jersey, then moved to Omaha, Nebraska. There Becky graduated from beauty school and she and Walt started their family, moving to Utah in 1953. They made their home in Tooele, Utah and raised three sons, Walter Charles, Donald Dewey,

and Jerry Ray, and a grandson, Cody Joe. Becky worked as a Tooele County Clerk, beautician and began Federal Service where she worked various jobs ending as a purchasing contractor in

the Procurement Division. She retired from Tooele Army Depot in 1977. Becky loved to sing with her sweetheart, Walt, and played guitar and danced; she taught her boys to dance. She and Walt were long time members of the Bit ’n Spur Rodeo Club and they followed their boys as they rode-oed. She enjoyed knitting, cro-cheting, sewing, gardening and painting. She also liked to fish, hunt, bowl and even golf occa-sionally. Becky is survived by her husband, Walt Wickham; sons Wally, Dewey (Jenny), and Jerry (Carla); grandchildren, Cody, Holly, Heidi, Dusty, Sarah and Spencer; great-grandchildren, Sighli, Ashton, Robert, Garrett, Cooper, Quincy, Jett, Brianna, Hally and Dylan; sister Shirley Clausen; brother, Bill (Lois) Harding; sister-in-laws, Berniece

Harding, and Madelyn Harding; and many nieces and nephews. Becky was preceded in death by her parents; brothers and sis-ters, John, Calvin, Delbert, Eva and Lucille; and granddaughter, Heather. A viewing and visita-tion will be held Friday evening, November 21, 2014 from 6-8 p.m. at the Tate Mortuary, Tooele, Utah. A family gathering and prayer will be at Tate Mortuary on Saturday, from 9-9:45 a.m., just prior to a graveside service and interment at the Tooele City Cemetery, Tooele, Utah, Saturday, November 22, 2014 at 10 a.m. The Wickham family would like to thank the wonderful people at Cottage Glen for the loving care they gave to our sweet wife and mother.

James Jeffery LoganJames Jeffery Logan was born

to Thomas S Logan and Mabel Alice Harppinger Logan on March 15, 1951 in Schenectady, New York. Family moved to Fort Plain in 1961 where they continued dairy farming. Went to work for the Montgomery County Sheriff Department in 1988. When he retired in 2003 where he met and married his eternal companion Rebecca M Gaddis Swensen. They moved to Mustang, Oklahoma, and lived there for six years until his health started to fail. They bought a home in Tooele, something he wanted for his wife before he passed. He was always a hard worker, always needing to be busy and loved to do for others when he could. He enjoyed gardening, wood-working, 4-wheeling and has an extensive Antique Lamp collec-tion. He is preceded in death by his parents, his first wife Shirley Ann Heroth, and his brother Arthur. He leaves behind his wife Becky, step-daughter Kimberly Jo Heroth, brothers: Thomas Logan,

Leonard (Linda) Logan, and Edward (Sondra) Logan, sisters: Valerie (Jerry) Sagers, Pamela (David) Hawkes, Kolleen Logan, Suzzette Logan, Roxanne Logan, and their families. Funeral ser-vices will be Saturday, November 22, 2014 at 11 a.m. in the Tooele 11th LDS Ward Chapel, 180 South Coleman, Tooele with a visita-tion starting at 10 a.m. Interment in the Tooele City Cemetery.

DEATH NOTICE

Ken ChristensenKen Christensen passed away

Thursday morning, November 20, 2014. Funeral services are pending. A full obituary will

appear in the next edition of

the Transcript Bulletin. For

more information, contact Tate

Mortuary at (435)882-0676.

Ann Lucille Johanson Frampton

Ann Lucille Johanson Frampton passed from this earthly life to be reunited with loved ones on the other side of the veil on Tuesday, November 18, 2014. She was “39 and hold-ing.” She was born on February 8, 1945 in Tooele, Utah to Vosco and Deahn Johanson. Ann grew up in Grantsville, Utah with her sister, Clara Beth, and many won-derful cousins and friends. She loved living in Grantsville and enjoyed the close-knit commu-nity. She also spent three years living in Germany and relished the opportunity to travel Europe and experience another part of the world. Ann met Carl Edward Frampton while they were work-ing at the Tooele Army Depot and they were married on August 26, 1967 and later solemnized that marriage for time and all eternity in the Salt Lake Temple. Ann was the world’s best Nana to her ten grandchildren, support-ing them in anything they did. She has had much joy in her pos-terity. Ann accepted and loved people unconditionally, touch-

ing many lives through her ser-vice and kindness. She “adopt-ed” many children and grand-children throughout the years and loved them as her own. Ann cultivated many talents through-out her life; she enjoyed swim-ming, painting, sewing/quilting, traveling with her family and best friend Tammie Fackrell, and has an immense love for music, even learning to play the piano later in life. Ann worked 28 years for the U.S. government; when she retired in 2010, she was working for the Department

of Agriculture (USDA-APHIS). Oh, how she loved her job and her coworkers! She was eager to retell stories from conferences or from the trappers in the field. She considered all of her cowork-ers dear friends and was sad to say goodbye to them when she retired . . . but she was defi-nitely excited to be retired! She wanted to spend more time with her family and have more time to do all the things she loved. She recently enjoyed celebrating her 50-year high school reunion. She considered it an incredible night with her dear friends catching up and reminiscing of days gone by. She had many callings throughout her life as a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and enjoyed the many years she served as a librarian and a youth teacher in the Grantsville 5th Ward. She also relished having her visiting and home teachers in her home. They were always her friends. She loved to travel. She espe-cially enjoyed cruising and the chance to snorkel in the crystal clear Caribbean waters. She was always looking forward to her next trip. She’s now experiencing

more beauty, peace and tranquil-ity than we can even imagine. We know we will be with our wife, mother, grandmother, sis-ter, aunt, cousin and friend once again and look forward to the stories she will have to share! She was preceded in death by her parents, her mother and father-in-law and her son-in-law Bret Sandberg. Her legacy is cherished by her husband, Carl Frampton; her sister and brother-in-law, Clara Beth and Brad Walters; her children: Catherine Frampton, Jon & Allyson Frampton (Justiss, Cody, Brenna, Ella, Brady and Samuel), Heather Sandberg (Brian, Brayden, Olivia), Elizabeth Frampton, and James & Britani Frampton (Nash); and her loving nieces, nephews, cousins, uncle Bill Hurst, and dear friends. Services will be held on Saturday, November 22, at noon at the LDS chapel located at 115 E. Cherry St, Grantsville, Utah. A visita-tion will be held from 10 a.m. until 11:30 a.m. prior to services. Interment will be at the Tooele City Cemetery. In lieu of flowers please donate in Ann’s name to the Huntsman Cancer Institute, Salt Lake City, UT.

A8 OBITUARY

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A8 OBITUARY

Happy Birthday Jerry!Jerry, this Friday you will be 37 years old. My how much you have grown. From infant to fl ight you left with a beautiful sight in the night.

Going home must have been lit from earth to Heaven for all the people who helped you here on earth. You must have had wings since birth!

Love You My Lords Beautiful Angel! From Your Family Here on Earth.

LoveMom, Daniel, Dion, Serina, D.J., Ayva

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A9THURSDAY November 20, 2014

chairperson of the Tooele County Democratic Party. “We will be back.”

The closest race was for coun-ty commission seat B in which Democrat Kendall Thomas pulled down 39 percent of the vote against Republican Myron Bateman’s 53 percent. Constitution Party candi-date Jonathan Garrard received 8 percent.

This was Thomas’ second unsuc-cessful attempt to run for a partisan seat on the county commission. In the past he has been success-ful at non-partisan races for the Tooele County School Board and the Stockton Town Council.

The tag line “Democrat” behind his name in the commissioner’s race made things difficult, Thomas said.

“I had people tell me they would vote for the worst Republican before they would vote for the best Democrat,” Thomas said.

He added a Republican friend told him, “Come on over and join us and then we’ll get you elected.”

Many Tooele County voters definitely consider party before they look at the person, accord-ing to Thomas, who talked one-on-one with thousands of voters as he knocked on doors during the course of his campaign.

“I would wish the next guy run-ning good luck,” he said. “I won’t say it can’t be done, but it is hard to get elected as a Democrat in this county.”

Johns-Young believes the local Democratic party needs to do a better job of branding.

“We need to let people know that the Democratic party is the party of the common man,” she said. “We want good responsible government, but we also represent the needs of working people.”

To win in Tooele County, local Democrats will need to differenti-

ate themselves from the national party, according to Johns-Young.

“Our local party platform says nothing about things like abortion and gun control,” she said. “These controversial and emotional issues are not local issues.”

The Tooele County Democratic Party platform deals with issues like economic development, open government, public safety, pres-ervation of Tooele County’s rural heritage and transportation needs, according to Johns-Young.

Despite the party’s loss on elec-tion night, the county Democratic party is growing in strength and numbers, according to Johns-Young.

“We have more people coming out to our caucus meetings, con-ventions and other functions,” she said. “We are growing momentum and have a lot of energy.”

They key to victory for Democrats will be to persuade the county’s large block of unaffiliated voters to take a look at Democratic can-didates.

While registered Republicans outnumber registered Democrats in Tooele County 10,717 to 2,140, there are 11,835 Tooele County vot-ers who identify themselves with no political party, according to Tooele County Clerk Marilyn Gillette.

Johns-Young isn’t planning on a long rest to recover the party’s elec-tion losses. Instead, she is ready to jump right back in the race.

“We need to get into the mode of letting people know what we, the Democrats, can do for Tooele County,” she said. “And that includes recruiting another slate of well-qualified candidates for the next election.”[email protected]

Democrats continued from page A1

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Kendall Thomas, a Democrat who ran for Tooele County Commission Seat B in this month’s election, watches results come in on election night. He lost to Republican Myron Bateman. Despite election day losses, the Tooele County Democratic Party says it will make a come back.

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A9

SNOWPACKSnow Water Equivalent as of 12 a.m. Wednesday

Rocky Basin Mining VernonSettlement Fork Creek

Source: Utah Natural Resources Conservation Services

Tooele Valley-Vernon Creek Basin

Snowcover 0.4 1.2 0.3Average 3.2 1.9 0.5Percent of average 12% 63% 60%

UV INDEX

Snowfall (in inches)

Last Month Season Week to date to date

The Sun Rise Set

The Moon Rise Set

UV INDEX

The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10Very High; 11+ Extreme

ALMANACTemperatures

Precipitation (in inches)

Daily Temperatures

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELESUN AND MOON

UTAH WEATHER

Last Normal Month Normal Year Normal Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D

Salt Lake City

Ogden

Logan

Provo

Vernal

Price

Tooele

Nephi

Manti

Green River

RichfieldMoab

Cedar CitySt. George Kanab

Blanding

BeaverHanksville

Delta

GrouseCreek

Roosevelt

Clive

Rush Valley

Wendover

Gold Hill

Vernon

Ophir

Grantsville

Tooele

Lake Point

Bauer

Stockton

Pine Canyon

Stansbury ParkErda

Knolls

Ibapah

Dugway

High Low

Eureka

Friday 7:22 a.m. 5:07 p.m.Saturday 7:23 a.m. 5:07 p.m.Sunday 7:24 a.m. 5:06 p.m.Monday 7:26 a.m. 5:06 p.m.Tuesday 7:27 a.m. 5:05 p.m.Wednesday 7:28 a.m. 5:05 p.m.Thursday 7:29 a.m. 5:04 p.m.

Friday 6:20 a.m. 4:54 p.m.Saturday 7:23 a.m. 5:40 p.m.Sunday 8:24 a.m. 6:33 p.m.Monday 9:22 a.m. 7:31 p.m.Tuesday 10:15 a.m. 8:34 p.m.Wednesday 11:03 a.m. 9:41 p.m.Thursday 11:46 a.m. 10:49 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

46/32

46/29

42/30

45/29

47/30

42/26

47/32

48/30

46/33

47/30

47/30

39/26

43/28

47/3249/32

45/32

48/28

47/30

47/31

46/32

46/23

45/27

42/18

45/23

48/30

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48/26

51/25

49/2652/26

48/2158/35 53/28

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49/2646/23

49/28

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45/23

New First Full Last

Nov 22 Nov 29 Dec 6 Dec 14

F Sa Su M Tu W Th

Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed

FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY

A blend of sun and clouds

48 30

Cloudy with a few showers; snow at

night

46 30

Cloudy; snow at night

40 24

Clouds limiting sun

41 26

Sunshine and some clouds

48

Mostly cloudy

42 28 29

Colder with sun and some clouds

47 14TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER

Shown is Friday’s weather. Temperatures are Friday’s highs and Friday night’s

lows.

High/Low past week 49/13Normal high/low past week 49/31Average temp past week 28.0Normal average temp past week 40.0

Statistics for the week ending Nov. 19.

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NOV 28

A9

by Darren Vaughan

COMMUNITY NEWS EDITOR

In its five seasons of existence, the Stansbury boys basketball program never has tasted post-season play.

This year, with a strong core of seniors who bring size and speed to the court, the Stallions feel they have a chance to change that.

“We want to be the first Stallion team in history to make it to the playoffs,” senior Gage Manzione said. “That’s what we’re shoot-ing for.”

With five players standing 6-foot-4 or taller, Stansbury has more size than most of their fel-low Class 3A opponents. That, along with a strong group of guards, has coach Rich Lakin hoping his squad can impose its will on other teams.

“For 3A, we’re big,” Lakin said. “I haven’t seen a team this big and with these kinds of guards that are good outside shooters.”

The Stallions are coming off a 9-14 season in 2013-14. Stansbury started the season strong, including a win over Tooele in the Region 11 opener, but lost its final eight games and missed the postseason. However, this year’s team wants to make a statement.

“The ultimate goal is obviously to get a first-round home play-off game,” senior Kyle Lindsley said. “We know we’re capable of that, but we’ve got to play like it. We’ve got a tough region with Bear River, Tooele, Grantsville and Ben Lomond. We expect to beat them, but it’s going to be tough. We’ve just got to always

be confident and go in expecting to win.”

The Stallions have three return-ing starters from last season in Manzione, Justin May and Shane Andrus. Manzione and May still are recovering from injuries they suffered during football season, though Manzione hopes to be back in time for the season’s first game and May should return in time for the Region 11 schedule.

“I think once they get healthy, we’ll start clicking and com-ing together as a team,” Lakin said, noting the team lost Zayne Anderson to a shoulder surgery.

Manzione was the third-lead-ing rebounder in Utah last year, but will get a lot of help from 6-foot-7 junior Dakota Fidler and 6-foot-5 junior Lane Shugart on the boards this time around.

Andrus, the team’s starting point guard, is pleased with how things are looking so far.

“We have a great team,” he said. “The chemistry is looking good. We’ve got excellent coach-es who know what they’re talking about. I expect us to do great things this season.”

Andrus will share time at the point with sophomore Jase Wanlass, who Lakin said will see a considerable amount of varsity playing time.

The Stallions have yet to post a winning season in their history, which may enable them to fly a bit under the radar in a difficult region.

That’s just fine by them.

Tall Stallions hope to rack up wins

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Sports

FROM THE SIDELINES

SPORTS WRAP Little Lady Buffs basketballBasketball season is upon us and once again it’s time for Little Lady Buffs. We will again have the pro-gram for first- through eighth-grade girls. Registration has passed, but you may also register the first day of practice, Wednesday, Dec. 3, from 6:30-8:30 p.m. in the high school main gym. Registration will be $65. Cost includes a shirt, basketball clin-ics and practices, seven games and free admission for the player and one guest to the senior recognition night on Feb. 5 against Grantsville High School.Utah JazzHead coach Quin Snyder earned his first technical foul of the year in his boisterous attempts to wake the Jazz up, helping Utah to come back from a 17-point deficit to beat Oklahoma City 98-81 in Salt Lake City on Monday. Point guard Alec Burks led the Jazz with 20 points and 14 rebounds. Oklahoma City played without Kevin Durrant and Russell Westbrook due to injuries, and the Thunder were led by Jeremy Lamb’s 19 points. Utah is now 5-7 and 3-2, and the Jazz will next face 8-2 Golden State on the road Friday at 8:30 p.m. MST. Utah footballThe Utes survived Stanford 20-17 on the road Saturday to improve to 7-3 overall and 4-3 in the Pac-12. The Utes, now 4-3 and ranked No. 20 in the country, are sitting in fifth place in the Pac-12 South behind three teams tied for second at 5-2. Stanford is in second place of the North division. Utah will next face No. 15 Arizona at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at Rice-Eccles Stadium. The game can be seen on ESPN.Utah State footballThe Aggies improved to 8-3 overall and 5-1 in the Mountain West with a 28-21 victory over New Mexico on Saturday. Now on a four-game winning streak, Utah State will next face San Jose State at home at 7:30 p.m. on Friday. The Spartans are 3-7 overall and 2-4 in the Mountain West’s Mountain division. The game can be seen on ESPN 2. BYU footballThe Cougars beat UNLV 42-23 on Saturday for BYU’s sixth win to become bowl eligible. Quarterback Christian Stewart had 325 yards and a trio of touchdowns while running back Paul Lasike added a pair of scores on the ground. The Cougars will next face Savannah State at 1 p.m. Saturday at LaVell Edwards Stadium. The FCS Tigers are cur-rently winless in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. Utah basketballThe No. 25 Running Utes lost to No. 16 San Diego State 53-49 on Tuesday. The Aztecs, who are known for tight defense, did not allow any Utah players to score in double figures. Utah was led in scoring by guard Brandon Taylor with nine points, while forward Joakob Poeltl grabbed 12 rebounds. San Diego State’s J.J. O’Brien led all scor-ers with 12 points as the Aztecs improved to 2-0 this season. Utah will next face UC Riverside at 7 p.m. on Friday in the Huntsman Center. BYU basketballThe Cougars beat Arkansas Little Rock on Tuesday 91-62. BYU’s Chase Fischer scored 19 in the con-test, matching UALR’s Roger Woods, who also chipped in nine rebounds in the losing effort. On Wednesday night, the Cougars wielded death on fellow LDS-friendly Southern Virginia University 101-48. Guard Jake Toolson scored a team-high 15 points of the bench to lead seven Cougars in double figures. The Cougars next face San Diego State on Monday. Utah State basketballThe Aggies beat Santa Clara on Wednesday 60-54 to improve to 3-0. The Broncos, who took a 16-1 lead in the opening minutes of the game, allowed Utah State to take its first lead with just under four minutes left to play. Sophomore Jalen Moor led all scorers with 15 and guard Chris Smith had 14 to along with his eight rebounds. The Aggies will next face Mississippi State on the road Saturday. The Bulldogs are 2-0 this season. Utah Valley basketballNow 1-1 with a loss to Eastern Washington last Friday, the Wolverines will face in-state foe Southern Utah at 7 p.m. on Saturday. Utah Valley is led by junior Marcel Davis, who is averaging 11.5 points per game this season. Weber State basketballNow 1-1, the Wildcats will take on Illinois State on Friday. The Cardinals are coming off a 60-55 loss to Utah State on Sunday in ISU’s season opener. Weber State also lost to Utah State in the first game of the season 72-61.Southern Utah basketballThe Thunderbirds will look to reverse their losing ways this season as they face Utah Valley at home on Saturday. Currently 0-2 with losses to Kansas State and Miami of Ohio, the Thunderbirds are led by junior guard A.J. Hess, who averages 15 points per game.

A10 THURSDAY November 20, 2014

Maybe my girlfriend’s loathing of the cold is rubbing off on me

— she gets cold anytime the thermostat is set at less than 74 degrees — but I’m really not looking forward to the winter season. I enjoy leading an active lifestyle, but since I live in Utah and have never taken up skiing or snowboarding, my winter recreational activities are signifi-cantly limited.

It’s pretty depressing to not be surrounded by intramural vol-leyball tournaments all winter and have one of the state’s larg-est indoor rock climbing gyms a short bus ride away. In college, I had both of these, with a sizable exercise facility on campus at my disposal.

I’m not sure culture shock is the right term, but I’m definitely going through some recreation shock here in Tooele County.

Let me sidetrack for a moment. In high school I joined the swim team halfway through preseason workouts because hey, I was a varsity athlete in

other sports, so why not? It was an awful decision and

the most difficult thing I’ve ever done. I thought I was going to drown in the pool often, and every day after practice I told my parents I was going to quit. As much as I hated it, I became halfway decent by the time my swimming career came to an end.

When I went to the Pratt Aquatic Center to cover Tooele’s meet against Hillcrest a week or two ago, all those memories came flooding back — see what I did there? — as my old coach chatted away old times during the 200 free.

Unfortunately, I think I’ve found the solution to my winter recreation blues.

Let’s be honest. Driving to Salt Lake or Sandy to climb at

Momentum everyday isn’t real-istic. I don’t want to shell out the cash for skiing lessons or yoga sessions. I’m not convinced there are quality pickup basket-ball games at the Dow James and I haven’t been invited to the elite volleyball pickup games yet. Bowling, while definitely an indoor sport, won’t give me the exercise I’m looking for. Oh, and we all know there’s no way I’m taking up running again after that hellish Ragnar race this summer.

Yep, looks like I’ll have to dig out the old swimming goggles and find my Huskies swim cap again.

But things could be a lot worse. The pool at the Pratt Aquatic Center is one of the nicest I’ve seen, between the fancy eight-lane timing system, digital pool clock and relatively low prices, this whole swimming thing might not be so bad — you know, aside from the actual swimming part.

And I’m sure if I drown there will be a cute, able life guard to

save my life.But don’t tell my girlfriend I

said that.

Tavin Stucki is a decorated sports journalist from Midvale,

Utah, who hasn’t found a sport he doesn’t like. He finished eighth-last in the 50 free at region during his rookie swim season and loves to complain about how difficult the sport is.

Must I resign myself to a chlorine-filled gymnasium?

by Tavin StuckiSPORTS EDITOR

The Tooele girls swim team improved to 2-0 this season with a dual-meet win over Box Elder on Tuesday 155-131, while the boys side fell 162-124.

“I was extremely pleased with the performance of both teams,” said head coach Mel Roberts. “Our times keep improving, but we are still experimenting with many of the swimmers trying to find out what their best events are.”

The Buffaloes only won a single relay in the meet, the girls 200 yard medley relay, but finished first in six of the 11 events.

Senior captain Katelin Hardy won the 200 yard intermediate medley in a time of 2 minutes, 37.59 seconds and the 100 fly in 1:09.79 — both were personal records. Fellow senior Brook Baker won the 50 free in a personal best of 29.02.

In the 100 free, Box Elder man-aged to out-touch Tooele — three times. The Bees finished first, sec-ond and third while Buffalo senior Hayley West took fourth with a time of 1:07.98, which was only .76 seconds out of first place.

Baker and West finished first and second in the 100 back.

In the boys 200 relay, Box Elder took top honors, beating the Tooele A team by .01 seconds with a time of 1:42.93. The Bees won again in the 400 free by less than a second, edging out Tooele’s time of 3:47.44.

Sophomore Dalton Wylie won the boys 100 free in a personal best of 53.62 ahead of freshman team-mate Hunter Sherwoodin 57.02, who beat Box Elder senior Nathan Struble by .02 to finish in second place.

“All of the younger swimmers are improving with each swim and doing well in whatever events they are entered,” Roberts said.

The Buffaloes faced Ben Lomond in Ogden on Thursday, but the meet had not finished as of press time. Tooele will also face Clearfield on Tuesday on the road in its third meet in seven days.

“It is early in the season,” Roberts said, “but I believe we are going to continue to improve and get better with each meet.”[email protected]

Tooele splits swim meet against Box Elder

Tavin StuckiSPORTS EDITOR

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

The Transcript’s sports editor Tavin Stucki isn’t looking forward to the winter rec-reation season because it means an end to golf, rock climbing and other summer activites.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Tooele sophomore Wylie Dalton looks at the scoreboard after the 200 free relay. Dalton was out-touched by Box Elder’s Nathan Struble, who helped Box Elder beat the Buffaloes by .01 second. Box Elder’s team finished in 1:42.93 and Tooele’s time was 1:42.94.

THS SWIMMING

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Stansbury’s Lane Shugart finishes a fast break during a scrimmage on Wednesday night. Stansbury will have its first home game Tuesday night against Kearns.

SHS BASKETBALL

SEE BASKETBALL PAGE A11 ➤

A10 SPORTSA10 SPORTS

THURSDAY November 20, 2014 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A11

“We’re going to prove some people wrong and make a better run than any other Stansbury teams have,” senior Alex Kimberling said. “I think if we come together, the sky’s the limit.”

Fellow senior Daniel Merritt agreed, but also said the Stallions won’t be content just to make it to the playoffs.

“We’re going to shock a lot of teams this year,” he said. “The ultimate goal is to get that play-off win.”

Stansbury will play a diffi-cult preseason schedule, with numerous road games in the Salt Lake Valley against Class 4A and Class 5A teams. Lakin said he scheduled those games because he believes his team will be competitive this season, and he wanted to make sure they were battle-tested when Region 11 opponents Tooele, Grantsville, Bear River and Ben Lomond come calling.

May believes that this is the year the Stallions finally can turn the corner.

“I have big expectations,” he said. “We have a great senior class and a great varsity team. We have a lot of potential if we all come together as one and play as a team. We can do great things.

“I think this year is going to finally set the bar for what Stansbury basketball is about.”[email protected]

Basketballcontinued from page A10

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Stansbury guard Jaxon Hale brings the ball down the court while Colton Christiansen defends in a scrimmage game during Stansbury’s team practice on Wednesday night.

PITTSBURGH (AP) — There are stars in the Atlantic Coast Conference who don’t wear gar-net and gold if you know where to look.

The thing is, nobody’s looking. Not hard anyway.

The ACC’s top running back toils in relative obscurity, his muscular brilliance overshad-owed by his team’s inability to get out of its own way: Pittsburgh’s James Conner.

The league’s most dynamic quarterback not named Jameis Winston spends his Saturdays trying to overcome the sins of a defense that can’t stop any-body: North Carolina’s Marquise Williams.

The nation’s leading intercep-tor is a sophomore who was vir-tually unknown two months ago and plays for a school obsessed with the head coach’s offen-sive genius: Louisville’s Gerod Holliman.

And the conference’s leading tackler is an anonymous every-man who has helped engineer one of college football’s most unlikely success stories: Duke’s David Helton.

It’s not hard to figure out why they remain unknown. The ACC technically consists of two divi-sions on paper but is really two separate leagues at the moment: No. 1 Florida State and every-body else.

The parity that has taken over the new-look 14-team confer-ence has cultivated some inter-esting storylines but hardly any sizzle for the impact players who are part of the muddled middle.

Pitt’s Conner is tracking down the likes of Tony Dorsett in the school record books. The sopho-more running back needs one touchdown over the final two weeks to equal the Heisman Trophy winner and Hall of Famer’s school mark of 22 scores set in 1976.

That’s the year the Panthers won the national title and Dorsett clutched the Heisman Trophy.

Yet Conner won’t find himself anywhere near New York City when the award for the nation’s top player is announced in December, even though the 250-pound converted defensive end is third in the country with 1,562 yards rushing and perhaps first

in bruises caused.“It would be nice, but it is what

it is,” Conner said.Conner instead will likely

see Wisconsin’s Melvin Gordon be among the Heisman final-ists after Gordon put up an FBS-record 408 yards last week against Nebraska. Conner joked Gordon’s remarkable day looked “like a typo,” though the same could be said about Conner, who already has three 200-yard games this season.

“Our numbers are kind of sim-ilar,” Conner said.

Everywhere except the win/loss column.

While Gordon and the 14th-ranked Badgers are 8-2 and steaming toward a major bowl, Conner and the Panthers (4-6) need to beat Syracuse and Miami to become bowl eligible.

“I’ll just continue to try and leave it out on the field,” Conner said with a shrug.

It’s a refrain echoed by Conner’s ACC brethren, guys whose high-light-reel plays are often left on the cutting room floor due in part to the inability for any pro-gram outside of Tallahassee to

gain national traction.Williams is putting up

Winston-esque numbers for the Tar Heels (5-5), ranking second in passing yards and total offense and seventh in yards rushing. He’s the main reason the embat-tled program is within a win of bowl eligibility and yet the junior understands as long as Winston is around he’s simply another face in a largely faceless crowd.

“It’s just the name of the game,” Williams said. “Maybe I need to do more than what I’m doing to get my name on the map. Hey, I’m up for the challenge.”

One the rest of the conference has struggled with as teams try to emerge from the vast shadow cast by Winston and the Seminoles.

Miami and Louisville both had chances to take out Florida State and raise the national profiles of

dynamic talents like Hurricanes running back Duke Johnson and the Cardinals’ Holliman. Both times the Winston engineered a thrilling comeback even with Johnson piling up 130 yards and a score and Holliman picking off Winston twice.

The inability to knock the Seminoles from their perch is one of the main reasons the ACC has just three teams in the Top 25 of the college football playoff rankings, the fewest among the five power conferences.

“Certainly some programs to their credit have held on to (top spots) longer and created sepa-ration,” Pitt coach Paul Chryst said.

And a logjam underneath.Duke’s Helton leads the ACC

with 103 tackles, including 11.5 (five solo and 13 assists) in a

51-48 overtime victory over Pitt. A dozen times the senior line-backer found himself hanging on while Conner bulled his way down field as two of the league’s best consistently found them-selves on a collision course with each other.

It made for an entertaining afternoon, even if it was played in front of a half-empty stadium and barely made a ripple even as Duke coach David Cutcliffe called Conner “a special football player.”

Conner insists he’s hardly alone in that category.

“Teams in the SEC and the Big Ten, they get a lot of hype and they deserve it,” Conner said. “The ACC has great players too.”

Now comes the hard part: win-ning enough games for people to take notice.

Parity around the ACC obscuring breakout stars

PREP SCHEDULEThursday, Nov. 20

Stansbury/Grantsville swimming vs. Bear River, 3 p.m. Pratt Aquatic Center

Tooele Swimming at Ben Lomond, 3:30 p.m.

Friday, Nov. 21Stansbury swimming at Davis tour-

nament, all dayStansbury girls basketball vs.

Ogden, 7 p.m. Tooele girls basketball at Orem,

7 p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 22Stansbury swimming at Davis tour-

nament, all day

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Stansbury boy’s basketball head coach Rich Lakin talks strategy with his players during a scrimmage at Wednesday night’s practice.

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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINA12 THURSDAY November 20, 2014

”“

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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Hometown• Bulletin Board

• Weddings, Missionaries, Birthdays

B1THURSDAY November 20, 2014

Unless otherwise requested, community news items such as weddings, missionaries, birthdays, babies and The Bulletin Board must be submitted by 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date. To place a community news item or for more information contact the Community News Editor at 882-0050 or [email protected]. Items more than one month old will not be considered for publication.

SHS FALL SPORTS WRAP UPPHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE

T he 2014 fall sports season was incredibly successful for Stansbury High, led by the football team’s third region championship in four years.

The Stallions went 9-1 through the regular season, with their only defeat coming at the hands of Class 3AA finalist Hurricane in a non-region game. Stansbury went 6-0 in Class 3AA North play, earning a first-round bye. The Stallions’ season ended in stunning fashion as Dixie rallied for a 49-42 win in the state quarterfinals.

The girls soccer team posted a 12-3-1 record, including a 6-1-1 mark that earned the Stallions a second-place finish in Region 11. Stansbury beat Juab 8-0 in the first round of the state tournament before losing to Dixie in the second round.

The volleyball squad went 14-8 overall and finished second in Region 11 with a 6-2 record. That earned the Stallions a trip to the state tournament, where Stansbury fell in the first round to Hurricane.

Boys cross-country runner Jaden Torgerson brought home an indi-vidual state championship, finishing the Class 3A race in 15 minutes, 40 seconds to beat his nearest competi-tor by more than four seconds. The Stallions finished second overall, with all five scoring runners finishing in the top 22.

The Stansbury girls cross-country team finished fourth in Class 3A, led by junior Maggie Beazer’s eighth-place finish at the state finals.

The girls tennis team tied for eighth in the state tournament, with No. 1 singles player Sydney Squires and the No. 1 doubles team of Kallie Stewart and Alyssa Guymon each advancing to the second round.

The boys golf team finished third in Region 11.

SEE SHS PAGE B8 ➤

Stansbury High senior Jaden Torgerson, top, nears the finish line to take first in the 3A Boys State Cross Country State Championship at Sugar House Park. Torgerson finished with a time of 15 minutes, 40 seconds. Above,

the Stansbury girls cross-country team runs in a pack at the start of the race. At right, Stansbury’s Camryn Anderson (8) and Rachel Kirchoff block Grantsville’s Courtney Orden (#4) during a match at home.

Stansbury quar-terback Gage Manzione, top, dives into the end zone during a game against Springville. Left, Michaela Didericksen (22) heads the ball during a match against Tooele. Below, Stansbury’s No. 1 singles play-er, Sydney Squires, hits a return.

HOMETOWN B1HOMETOWN B1

THURSDAY November 20, 2014B2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

WEDDING

Hanson/HowardMonica Hanson and Jake

Howard were married for time and all eternity on October 30, 2014 in the San Diego, California LDS Temple. A wedding celebra-tion will be held in their honor on Saturday, Nov. 22 at the Ivy House in Salt Lake City. Parents of the bride are Chris and Evon Hanson of Stansbury Park. Parents of the groom are Michael and Shauna Howard of Idaho.

ANNIVERSARY

Allen and Karen Dobson

The children and grandchil-dren of Allen and Karen Dobson would like to announce their golden wedding anniversary on Nov. 21. They were high school sweethearts who grew up and were married in Holden, Utah, on Nov. 21, 1964. They are the proud parents of Cory (Bev) and Nicole Clark (Brad), along with seven grandchildren whom they are very proud of. They will be celebrating this milestone with their children and grandchildren with a dinner at the Lion House. Please feel free to call or send a card of appreciation to acknowl-edge this great achievement of theirs. They would enjoy hearing from family and friends.

Danny KeetchElder Danny Keetch has been

called to serve and labor as a missionary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the New Jersey Morristown Mission. He will report to the Mexico Missionary Training Center on Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2014, where he will prepare to preach the gospel in the Spanish Language. Elder Keetch is so excited to serve the Lord and will speak in the Grantsville 8th Ward Sacrament meeting, located at 550 E. Durfee St., on Sunday, Nov. 23 at 12:45 p.m. Danny is the son of Jim and Anita Keetch.

MISSIONARY

Write a letter to the Editor!

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Something On Your Mind?

P.O. Box 390Tooele, UT 84074

[email protected]

B2

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THURSDAY November 20, 2014

If you think about taking a trip to a farm, what are some of the first images that come

into your mind’s eye? I’ll venture that chickens roaming around the farmyard, scratching for food in the soil, was one of the first things that popped into your head. It wasn’t too long ago the most American households had at least a small flock and chores like gathering eggs or process-ing birds was a way of life. Many times, the flock would consist of various breeds that were known to be good for egg production or to grow big enough to feed the family for dinner.

Of course today, millions of chickens are raised in fac-tory farms in order to meet the demands of a hungry nation. Chicken is one of the top ingre-dients utilized in the fast-food industry. Chickens have been genetically adapted to gain weight rapidly in order to be “skillet ready” in just six weeks or to be so efficient with egg production that they barely have enough meat on their bones to make a stew when their laying days are over.

Industrialized chicken farming has brought with it many benefits for consumers including the abil-ity to provide a consistent and healthy source of nutrition while keeping meat and egg prices low. However, 99 percent of the coun-try’s chicken production comes by way of the White Leghorn breed and many of the heritage breeds have gone by the wayside.

There is a grass-roots move-ment among people in America today to raise more of their own food and raising backyard poultry is quickly becoming more com-mon in rural and urban settings. In Tooele County, for example, chapter 4 of the Tooele County Land Use Ordinances under Animal and Fowl Restrictions says that residents are allowed to have poultry without a permit as long as the fowl and the coop are not any closer than 40 feet to any dwelling on an adjacent parcel of land or to the street.

Similar ordinances are becom-ing more common than not around the country. Tooele City also allows for up to six chickens

— hens only — no roosters. You can read the ordinance by visiting www.tooelecity.org, clicking on the “ordinances” link, and going to Title 7, chapter 14.

You may say, “Why raise my own chickens? Eggs are read-ily available at the grocery store and I don’t want to go to all the work to raise and process my own chickens for meat.” Certainly rais-ing chickens is not for everyone. But if you are a gardener or a per-son interested in moving towards a more self-reliant lifestyle, there are several benefits to poultry to think about.

First of all, chickens are natu-ral “recyclers”. They will eat any food scraps, yard waste, old bread, green weeds, stale crack-ers or pretty much any food that you need to dispose of except meat-based items. This not only reduces your garbage output, but also saves on the feed bill for your birds.

Second, you will have a con-stant supply of protein-rich eggs. If you have ever eaten a farm-fresh egg, that may have just been gathered from the nesting box minutes or hours before, you know how rich they taste and how the yolks are a vibrant orange, not pale yellow. Scrambled, they are fluffier and just better all around. We have 7 hens and a rooster and consistently get six to seven eggs a day. With just the two of us at home, our grown kids and our friends benefit from our excess eggs. The rooster was not planned by the way — he was supposed to be a “she” and he really serves no purpose other than to “harass” (this is a family newspaper, so I’m choosing my terms care-fully) the hens and to try to run off any human male of any age who comes near his harem. My wife enjoys his crowing and says he “adds great ambiance” to our place, so I tolerate him.

Speaking of hens and roosters, let me take a moment to dispel

a myth. Many people think that you have to have a rooster to have egg production. This is true only if you want to have fertile eggs. Every hen is born with a finite amount of ova, just like all mam-mals including female humans. A hen will have the ability to lay about 1,000 eggs in her lifetime.

At about six weeks old, the eggs in the juvenile hen start forming, one at a time, and pass out of the hen on a daily basis until the last egg is gone and the hen is “spent.” This process typically takes about two years but can vary widely depending on the bird. A hen can lay less eggs than the amount of ova she has to begin with, but she can’t lay more. Factors such as health, diet, amount of light expo-sure all have an effect on the total amount of eggs produced.

Third, a chicken’s waste is very rich in nitrogen. As it collects in the straw, wood chips or other bedding that you put down in the bottom of the coop. it will be absorbed into the bedding, and be constantly churned by the chickens and matured until you are ready to clean it out and put it into your compost pile. Chickens are a compost machine! And put-ting that compost on your plants, and watering it in, is like giving them a boost of super food! For this reason, our birds are a key part of our soil improvement efforts around here.

Fourth, chickens are interest-ing and entertaining. My friend Ron Staley in Stockton has raised chickens for many years. In his Master Gardener Backyard Poultry presentation last night, Ron made the observation that his bantams are just plain fun to have around. There is a lot of social interaction within the flock, as well as with other animals — not to mention the Staley fam-ily and visitors to the home.

If your curiosity has piqued about getting some chickens, but you have no idea how to get started or which breeds to buy, the 2014 Self Reliance Issue of Mother Earth News has a great article entitled Heritage Backyard Chickens that will educate you on 20 compelling heritage chicken breeds. It spells out the draw-

backs and benefits of each and will help you determine which breeds you may want to start with. Backyardchickens.com is also an excellent website to visit when you are contemplating adding chickens to your “back to basics” lifestyle. There are numer-ous resources on the site includ-ing information about breeds and supplies, forums on almost any poultry-related topic you can think of, articles and profiles. You can even start a thread on a topic that you are interested in, or have a question about, and get input by other chicken folks from around the world. Mother Earth News (www.motherearthnews.com) has extensive information about raising chickens. You can get quick answers on-the-go by downloading their Pickin’ Chicken info app.

As for now, with the snow on its way and Old Man Winter get-ting ready to settle in, it will be a few months before you can begin your new adventure. Of course, come spring, those little chicks will be for sale again in the metal water troughs at Cal Ranch here in Tooele and in many other farm and ranch stores across the Wasatch Valley. 2015 might just be the year that you decide to take a few home!

Jay Cooper can be contacted at [email protected], or you can visit his website at dirtfarmerjay.com for videos and articles on gar-dening, shop skills, culinary arts and landscaping.

Don’t miss out on benefits of backyard poultry

B3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

BIRTHDAY

Peg WilsonPeg Wilson is celebrating her

90th birthday Nov. 22. Her family would like to invite friends and neighbors to join us from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Tooele Holiday Inn Express. No gifts, please.

GARDEN SPOT

Jay CooperCORRESPONDENT

BOOKWORM

‘Yes Please’Whether you know Amy

Poehler from “Parks and Recreation,”

“Saturday Night Live” or one of her movies, most of America has smiled at least once because of Poehler.

In her first book, Poehler weaves a story that is half-mem-oir, half-advice and all funny. Beginning with growing up in a small Massachusetts town, all the way through hosting awards shows, she builds on her own stories to tell how long, hard work lead to stardom. Poehler also gives the more serious top-ics covered in the book, like divorce, the weight they deserve without feeling too heavy, while managing to weave in advice on topics as varied as body image, the Mommy Wars and managing your career.

The best chapter of the book, one that will stay with you long after you’re done reading, is about a skit Poehler performed on “SNL” where she inadver-tently made fun of a disabled woman. The repercussions of the incident are fascinat-ing. Sharing with the reader email exchanges and private conversations, she lets us in on Hollywood gossip and fascinat-ing behind-the-scenes scoops. This chapter, entitled “Sorry,

Sorry, Sorry,” would be amazing for a book club to discuss.

The stories veer into drugs, sex and other adult content on occasion, but overall the clear takeaway of the book is: work hard and be nice.

If you want inspiration about how hard work can lead to suc-cess, with laughs and special celebrity and comedy references thrown in, this is your read.

“Yes Please”By Amy Poehler

(Harper Collins, $28.99)Reviewed by Molly Ford

GRANTSVILLE JOB SHADOW

PHOTO COURTESY OF KELLY MORGAN

Seven Grantsville High School students, along with their work-based learn-ing coordinator, Kelly Morgan, attended a job shadow at the Loveland Living Planet Aquarium. The students were interested in marine biology as a future career. They toured the aquarium with Sean Hopewell, education direc-tor, and also went behind the exhibits and on the deck of the shark tank. Pictured with a mouth of a whale are Shannon Muir, Caitlynn Smith, Jacob Bailey, Jerod Stein, Ethan Rieffanaugh, Breanna Dzieron and Brynn Knight.

B3

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B3

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ANSWERS ON B5

Stone Soup by Jan Eliot

Tank McNamara by Bill Hinds & Jeff Millar

Adam@Home by Rob Harrell

The Duplex by Glenn McCoy

Fred Basset by Alex Graham

Baldo by Hector Cantu & Carlos Castellanos

Thatababy by Paul Trapp

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Examine what’s going on around you. Pay attention to detail as well as to what your peers are up to. Don’t argue over trivial mat-ters. ★★★

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t take chances, live in the past or procrastinate. You have to stay tuned in to the people and things that are important to you now if you want to stay on top of your personal situation. ★★★

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don’t trust anyone with your per-sonal or financial affairs. You will be disappointed by the motives behind someone’s generosity. ★★★★★

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Participate in an event that will help you understand dif-ferent cultures. Exploring will help take your mind off person-al situations that need time to settle. ★★

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Watch over your investments closely. Look for solutions that will help you deal with a precarious situa-tion. Make changes to your cur-rent lifestyle that will help you reduce your overhead. ★★★★

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Be extremely careful when handling relationship issues. Any show of instability will end up costing you. Put your heart on the line. ★★★

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Can you keep a secret? It will be vital for you not to leak information. A change in your status will depend on how you handle discussions with people who can influence your future. ★★★

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Consider what everyone around you is doing. Making an impul-sive move will be out of charac-ter, but an effective way to deal with competition. ★★★★

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don’t be fooled by what oth-ers say. Go to the source and get your facts straight. Knowledge will make the difference when facing a decision. ★★

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Take the road less traveled and you will take everyone by surprise. Once you show your strengths, you will find it easy to get the support you need. ★★★★★

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Don’t let confusion set in due to conversations with generous but uninformed individuals. Make modifications based on what works for you. ★★★

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Offer help, and you will discover valuable information that’s instru-mental to your advancement. Contracts and alliances can be formed and put into play. ★★★

Horoscopeby Eugenia Last

Universal Crossword

CUTE COUPLE By Janet Wise

ACROSS 1 Fare

listings 6 Not

at all emotional

11 Ballerina’s step apt for this puzzle

14 Like Bo-Peep’s charges

15 Terra-___16 “Lemon”

attachment17 Crafty

and involved plot

19 Sawbuck20 Batteries’

ends21 Revealed23 Decorative

flaps26 Mexicali

men27 Pass, as

time28 Iranian

city30 Legendary

actor Grant

31 Chorus member

32 ___ Tome35 Invoice

abbr.36 The folks38 The works39 French

king

40 Buenos ___

41 Some Nintendo products

42 Bugs Bunny’s favorite food

44 Mode of standing

46 Like some soups

48 Abbreviate49 Knuckle-

heads50 Pass-

ing bad checks

52 Biochem-istry abbr.

53 Many are hyphenated

58 “Star-Spangled Banner” preposition

59 One-named pop star

60 “South Pacific” hero

61 “___ Doubtfire”

62 Type of orange

63 Historic Alabama city

DOWN 1 May

honoree apt for this puzzle

2 “Die Meis-tersinger” heroine

3 Actor Cage, familiarly

4 Down in the dumps

5 Fishing nets

6 A lot 7 Bag type 8 Elevator

name 9 “What was

___ do?”10 Capital of

Australia11 Certain

guardian12 Doe

follower, in song

13 Mails18 Piece of

correspon-dence

22 Santa ___ winds

23 ’70s compact

24 “Remem-ber the ___!”

25 Details26 Boutique28 Basic belief29 Means

justifiers

31 Hawaiian tuber

33 “The Brady Bunch” housekeeper

34 Football Hall of Famer Merlin

36 Sharp-shooter

37 Breezy41 Pentagon

brass exercise

43 Hill dweller

44 Bad place for a splint

45 Metric heavy weights

46 Kind of drive

47 Blade sharpener

48 Symbol of strength

50 Capital on the Dnieper

51 Not being used

54 Orthodon-tists’ org.

55 .001 inches

56 “A Night-mare on ___ Street”

57 Where the buoys are

Edited by Timothy E. Parker November 17, 2014

The Fusco Brothers by J.C. DuffyHeart of the City by Mark Tatulli

Pooch Café by Paul Gilligan

LIO by Mark Tatulli

In the Bleachers by Steve MooreCornered by Baldwin

THURSDAY November 20, 2014B4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

B4 COMICSB4 COMICS

THURSDAY November 20, 2014 B5TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

MICROSOFT TECH GURU

APPLE TECH GURU

When a window pops up and asks you to update some software, are you

unsure if you should allow it? Don’t fret. Many are unsure what to update for fear of download-ing the wrong thing on their computer. Here are some of the things you should allow to update when you are prompted.

Let’s first start with the Adobe products. For most of us, we have Adobe Reader and Flash installed on our machines, and we should allow updates to install in both these cases.

If your machine has Adobe Shockwave, it is recommended it be removed. Go to “Programs and Features” in the Control Panel and click to uninstall it.

A word about updating or reinstalling Flash. If you know your computer has Adobe Flash installed (look in list under Programs and Features in the Control Panel) and you get a message that you need to install it again, this may be an indica-tion your computer has more serious issues. In this case, you

can try uninstalling Flash and then run your antivirus soft-ware. Next, reinstall Flash from Adobe.com and try any video on YouTube.com or other video streaming website, to see if it plays properly.

Another place you should give attention to often is Windows Update. Open Internet Explorer, and click “Tools” and then click “Windows Update.” When the new window opens, you’ll notice a link for: “Important” and a link for “Optional” updates, and you should install the updates included in both links. If you click on each link, you can see the specific updates available. I fully recommend you at least install all those that are for Windows 8 and Windows 8.1. After you click the button to install the updates, after every-

thing downloads and installs, click the “Restart” button. Your computer will configure Windows Updates as it restarts and then you should again, open Internet Explorer and click “Tools” and “Windows Update.” Continue this process of install/restart until you receive the mes-sage “No updates are available.”

While you are looking through your list of installed programs, if you see you have Java installed, go ahead and click to uninstall it. It is recommended that it be uninstalled from our machines, unless we absolutely need it. There are some websites that still require Java, but it seems that list is steadily shrinking.

Other software that may need to be updated manually may involve your specific type of computer. You may even receive a pop up to update your printer software. If you do, just use com-mon sense. For example, I notice that HP likes to update their computer software and printer software through a pop up in the lower-right corner. It specifically

states “HP” and what the updates are for. You will want to install all the updates that come from your computer manufacturer.

One last note. I am still run-ning into customers and read-ers who are falling prey to the “Microsoft giving you a phone call” scam. Please, keep in mind that Microsoft does not call you unless you specifically ask them to. Also, remember that Microsoft does not fix comput-ers, they will tell you to take it to a third party for repair. The general rule to remember here is this: If they call you, chances go up it is a scam. If you call them, well chances are it isn’t a scam.

After running any of these processes, be sure to set a new manual system restore point.

For 14 years, Scott Lindsay has helped tens of thousands of people better their skills, publish-ing more than 250 articles about Microsoft software, the computer and the Internet. You can reach Scott for comments or questions at [email protected].

What software should you update?

Apple is touting some nice software upgrades with the new, free, OS X Yosemite,

such as updated FaceTime and Family Sharing, but there also is a fresh new interface and look. Apple recommends you upgrade to receive the latest software upgrades as well as any new security updates.

Before you begin, remove any disks that may be in your drive(s), remove all external USB drives and anything else other than a keyboard and mouse.

If you haven’t upgraded yet, you are probably getting prompts from Apple to do so. Open the App Store. At the top-middle, you’ll see “Featured,” “Top Charts,” “Categories,” “Purchases” and “Updates.” Click “Updates.” You should see a large invitation to upgrade to OS X Yosemite.

To the bottom-right, click “Update All” or just “Update.” You may get a message that

states your Mac will need to fin-ish downloading before they are installed. Click the “Download & Restart” button. Below and to the right, you may see an indica-tor that it is downloading. It will most likely download and install any software that was waiting in the queue before OS X Yosemite was put in line. In my case, my Mac still needed to download and install the new version of iTunes 12.0.1 and a security update. If you notice the same for your Mac, it will increase the overall time this upgrade will take.

Once the updates are down-loaded and throughout the upgrade, your Mac may restart several times. After your updates

are installed, go back to the App Store to install OS X Yosemite. Click the “Free Upgrade” button to begin. Type in your Apple ID and password, and then select “Sign In” to continue. There is an indicator displaying the down-load progress and time. The size of OS X Yosemite is greater than 5 GB, so depending on your Internet speed, this may take more than two or three hours to download.

Follow the prompts to contin-ue with the installation. Be sure to accept any license agreements. It will also indicate what disk to install OS X Yosemite, select “Install” to continue and enter your Apple ID and Password and then select “OK.” The progress bar will indicate approximately how long it will take to “Prepare to install” and then you can select “Restart,” or it will automatically restart within a few moments.

At this point, once your Mac restarts, you will see another

progress bar indicating the instal-lation. The progress bar will turn into another progress bar to com-plete the installation. My Mac took another 23 minutes.

When the installation is com-plete, you will need to sign in to your computer. Next, agree to the license agreement, upgrade to iCloud Drive, choose whether to send diagnostic information back to Apple, and then your Mac will begin setting everything up. Once it is complete, it will take you to your new desktop and you are now ready to explore Apple’s new operating system.

Next week, I’ll go over some of the improvements and enhance-ments made to OS X.

For 14 years, Scott Lindsay has helped tens of thousands of people better their skills, publishing more than 250 articles about the com-puter and the Internet. You can reach Scott for comments or ques-tions at [email protected].

Upgrading your Mac to Yosemite is free

Scott LindsayGUEST COLUMNIST

Scott LindsayGUEST COLUMNIST

FINANCIAL FOCUS

It’s almost Thanksgiving, a holiday that once cel-ebrated the harvest season.

Although many of us today may not be directly connected to agriculture, we still gather on Thanksgiving with our loved ones to share whatever “bounty” we may have. But this practice doesn’t have to begin and end with food. Why not incorporate the spirit of sharing into your overall financial strategy?

Here are a few suggestions for doing just that:

• Make financial gifts. You could give shares of stock to your loved ones, or perhaps give them money to help fund their IRAs. (They must have earned income, however, to be eligible to contribute to an IRA.) You can give up to $14,000 per year, per recipient. If you are married, you and your spouse can each give up to the $14,000 yearly limit.

• Invest in your children’s future. To help your children meet the high costs of higher education, you might want to invest in a college savings vehicle. One option to consider is a 529 plan. When you contrib-ute to a 529 plan, your earnings are subject to tax-free growth potential and distributions are free of federal taxes, provided they are used for qualified higher education expenses. (Keep in mind, though, that Section 529 plan distributions not used for these qualified expenses may be subject to income tax and a 10% penalty.) Furthermore, if you invest in your home state’s 529 plan, you may receive state tax incentives. Tax issues for 529 plans can be complex, though, so you’ll need to consult with your tax advisor about your situ-ation. Another benefit of 529 plans: You control the assets right up to the point at which they are actually used. So, if you have been putting away money for a particular child (or grand-child) and he or she decides against college, you can easily

switch to another beneficiary.• Review your insurance poli-

cies. If something were to hap-pen to you, is your life insurance sufficient to take care of your family? In other words, would there be enough money avail-able to pay off your mortgage, send your children to college and help your surviving spouse meet at least some of his or her retirement expenses? A financial professional can help you deter-mine if your life insurance is suf-ficient for your needs.

• Consider involving your family with your estate plans. To help ensure your wishes get car-ried out the way you intended, consider keeping family mem-bers informed of your estate strategy, which could involve your will, living trust, power of attorney and other legal docu-ments. And don’t forget to keep your beneficiary designations up to date on your retirement accounts and your life insurance policy. So if you’ve gone through changes in your family situation, such as a divorce or remarriage, work with your professional team, including your financial advisor and your tax and legal advisors, to make ensure your investment strategy aligns with your estate goals.

Once the turkey is eaten and the football games have ended, Thanksgiving will draw to a close. But consider these strate-gies sharing your “bounty” with your loved ones all year long — and throughout your lifetime.

Tye Hoffmann is an invest-ment representative for Edward Jones Investments located at 974 N. Main St. in Tooele. He can be contacted at 833-9440 or at 830-0917.

Share your ‘bounty’ with your loved ones

Tye HoffmannGUEST COLUMNIST

B5

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Saturday, November 22nd at 5:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.Pinehurst LDS Church Building

196 N Pinehurst Ave., Tooele, UT 84074

RSVP to Tonya Bishop by November 20th, 435.249.1500

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TooeleSettlement Canyon IrrigationThe Settlement Canyon Irrigation Company annual shareholders’ meet-ing will take place Tuesday, Dec. 2 at 7 p.m. in the auditorium at the Tooele County Courthouse for the purposes of approving the minutes and financial report; electing a three-year Board mem-ber; the president’s report and other business. Any votes of water shares done by proxy must have permission in writing. All proxy information must be turned in to the office at least five days prior to the annual meeting. For more information, call Camille at 435-830-8780.

Tooele County Choral SocietyThe Tooele County Choral Society is once again holding open auditions for singers to join us for our 10th-annual Christmas season and beyond. We are looking for both men and women to join us. We rehearse every Saturday night from 7-9 p.m. Please call Denise McCubbins at (435) 224-5032 for audi-tion information.

Senior CenterThe senior center is for the enjoyment of all seniors 55 and older. New and excit-ing activities include bridge, pinochle, bingo, exercise program, line dancing, wood carving, Wii games, watercolor class, movies and health classes. Meals on Wheels available for home-bound. Lunch served weekdays. For age 60 and above, suggested donation is $3. For those under age 60, cost is $5. Transportation available to the store or doctor visits for residents in the Tooele and Grantsville areas. For transporta-tion information call 435-843-4102. For more information about the Tooele center, call 435-843-2110.

AARP Smart Driver CourseThis course will take place Friday, Nov. 21 at Mountain West Medical Center, 2055 N. Main St., Tooele. Registration is at 9 a.m., with lunch at 11:30 a.m. sponsored by MWMC Senior Circle. The cost is $20 for non-members, with a $5 discount for members. The class will conclude at 2:30 p.m., All participants must sign up prior to the date of the class. For more information or to sign up, call 435-843-3690 or 435-843-3691.

GrantsvilleFamily History CenterGreet your ancestors free at the Grantsville Family History Center, 117 E. Cherry St. All are welcome with consultants there to assist you. Open Mondays noon to 4 p.m., and Tuesday through Thursday noon to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.

Senior CenterThe senior center is for the enjoyment of all seniors age 55 and older. For info, call 435-884-3446. Activities include Bunco, exercise programs, bingo, ceramics, pinochle, movies and wood carving, etc. Meals on Wheels available for homebound. Lunch served week-days. For age 60 and above, suggested donation is $3. For those under age 60, cost is $5. Transportation available to the store or doctor visits for residents in the Tooele and Grantsville areas. For transportation information, call 435-843-4102.

Stansbury ParkRestoration at Benson GristmillThe Historic Benson Gristmill Restoration Committee is seeking donations from individuals, groups, and businesses to help with restoration efforts and the operation of the historic Gristmill site. Donations may be sent to Tooele County Benson Gristmill Fund, 47. S. Main Street, Tooele, Utah 84074. For more information contact Mike 602-826-9471.

SchoolsGrantsville High School GHS will be holding its third annual Holiday Boutique on Nov. 22 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at GHS. This is the SBO fundraiser and we are currently accept-ing vendors for the event. Please con-tact Liz Smith at [email protected] for further information. Vendor space is $25 for a 10 foot by 10 foot space — this is only the space, you must provide your own table and chairs. Applications are being taken through Nov. 17. Space is only reserved with payment.

Nov. 17-21 will be College Application Week at GHS. The goal of Utah College Application Week is to provide every high school senior the opportunity to complete at least one college or university application. Call Mrs. Jolynn Peterson at 435-884-4500 for more information.

Saint Marguerite Catholic SchoolSave the date for Jan. 31, 2015, for our annual Scholarship Banquet. Come and show your support. All are welcome.

Tooele Junior High SchoolThe next Tooele Junior High Community Council’s next meeting will be held on Thursday, November 20, 2014, at 6:30 p.m. in the TJHS library. All parents are invited and encouraged to attend.

Grantsville Elementary SchoolThe Grantsville Elementary School Community Council’s next meeting will be Thursday, Nov. 20 at 4 p.m. Any interested parents are welcome to attend.

TATCExpanded Welding ProgramTATC has expanded their welding pro-gram to provide more comprehensive training that will meet the demands of local employers. Enroll today to get started with your training toward a promising career call 435-248-1800 or visit tatc.edu.

Business/ITRethink education and enroll today in our Business and/or IT programs for a better chance to succeed in today’s economy. Enroll today, there are some openings in these programs for new students. Call 435-248-1800 or stop by our campus 88 S. Tooele Blvd, for more information.

EducationAdult EducationMonday, Wednesday, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Thursday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Friday, 8 a.m. to noon. ESL class Tuesday and Thursday, 6-8 p.m. Adult Education will be closed Nov. 26-28; Dec. 22 to Jan. 2. Dec. 19 is the last day of the term.

Online coursesOnline courses in Network+ and Security+ IT are designed for the IT pro-fessional seeking to upgrade their skills and knowledge of networking and secu-rity, and prepares you for the CompTIA Network+ and Security+ exams. Call the TATC at 248-1800 for more information or to enroll.

Adult educationGet your high school diploma this year. All classes required for a high school diploma, adult basic education, GED preparation and English as a second language are available. Register now to graduate — just $50 per semester. Located at 211 Tooele Blvd., call 833-8750. Adult education classes are for students 18 and over.

ESOLESOL conversational classes are held Tuesdays and Thursdays. ESOL students may also come anytime the center is open for individualized study. Registration is $50 per semester. Call 833-8750 for more information.

Early Head StartDo you have a child under age 3? Are you currently pregnant? VANTAGE Early Head Start is a free program for eligible families that offers quality early educa-tion for infants and toddlers in the home; parent education; comprehensive health services to women before, during and after pregnancy; nutrition education and family support services. Call 435-841-1380 or 801-268-0056 ext. 211 to apply or for free additional information.

Gardening2015 Garden Tour Applications and NominationsThe Master Gardeners are accepting applications and nominations for the 2015 Spring Garden Tour that will be held on Saturday, June 13, 2015. If you have a great yard you’d like to be considered for the Tour, or know some-one that does, contact Jay Cooper at [email protected] or 435-830-1447.

ChurchesThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day SaintsTo find a meeting house and time of worship for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, go to http://mor-mon.org/meetinghouse or contact 435-850-8211.

Adult religion classBYU Adult Religion Class runs through Dec. 2, 2014, on Tuesday evenings from 7-8:30 p.m. Subject: Doctrine and Covenants. Location: Grantsville Seminary building. Subject taught by Darin Griffith. Tuition is $21 per course or $2.50 per lecture. Registration at the door 15 minutes before class.

Berean Full Gospel ChurchWe invite you to discover how God’s Word can transform your life and provide you with the answers for questions and for problems you may be struggling to overcome. Come join us this Sunday morning for our 10 a.m. worship service where we will assemble in praise, share testimonies and explore worship in ways that strive to highlight the greatness of God. After our morning praise and wor-ship time we enter into a one-hour Bible Study at 11 a.m. Attend with us Sunday mornings at 635 N. Main St., (Phil’s Glass), or call 435-578-8022 for more information.

First Baptist ChurchWhat does Jesus say about everyday situations? That’s what we’ll learn in a series through the Gospels in a chrono-logical order of Jesus’ life. Join us in learning and in worship of the Lord, and serve him by serving those around us. Sunday Bible study: 9:45 a.m. Worship: 11 a.m. Tooele First Baptist — 580 S. Main St.; 882-2048

United Methodist ChurchTooele United Methodist Church ser-vices are held on Sundays at 11 a.m. Please check our website, tooelecumc.org, or call Tooele UMC’s office at 882-1349 or Pastor Debi’s cell at 801-651-2557 for more info. We are located at 78 E. Utah Ave. in Tooele.

Church of ChristChurch of Christ meets at 430 W. Utah Ave. Bible class, Sunday at 10 a.m. and worship from 11 a.m. to noon. Wednesday Bible class at 7 p.m. We seek to be the Lord’s church estab-lished about 33 AD. Jesus is our only head of the church, headquarters are heaven. Come and grow with us. Call 882-4642.

Cornerstone BaptistPassion for God, compassion for people at 276 E. 500 North in Tooele, phone: 882-6263. Come as you are this Sunday, where you can hear a message from the Bible and meet new friends. Service times: Bible study (for all ages) 9:45 a.m.; morning worship 11 a.m.; evening worship 6 p.m.; WiseGuys chil-dren’s program 6 p.m. Nursery provided for all services, and children’s church during morning worship. WiseGuys Program during evening worship.

Mountain of Faith LutheranWe’re a healthy, growing congregation who welcomes newcomers and reaches out to those in need. Join us for worship Sunday mornings at 10 a.m., 560 S. Main, Tooele. We treat the word of God with respect without taking ourselves too seriously. Check us out on Facebook by searching for Mountain of Faith Lutheran Church. Please join us for meaningful worship that is also casual and relaxed. For more information, call 882-7291.

St. Barnabas’ EpiscopalWeekly service of word, prayer and sac-rament followed by fellowship. Sunday mornings at 10 a.m. St. Barnabas’ Episcopal Church, 1784 N. Aaron Drive, Tooele. Phone: 882-4721. Email: [email protected]. Web at www.stbarnabasepiscopal.org. You are God’s beloved child, beautifully created in God’s own image. Whatever your his-tory, wherever you are in life’s journey, the Episcopal Church welcomes you.

Spanish servicesLa Iglesia Biblica Bautista de Tooele le invita a sus servicios en español los jueves a las 6 p.m. y los domingos a las 2 p.m. We invite you to their Spanish services on Thursday at 6 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. Come to know a church that focused in the word of God rather than the emotions. God loves you and he wants to reveal himself to you. Located at 276 E. 500 North, Tooele. Call 840-5036, rides provided.

St. MargueriteSt. Marguerite Catholic Community welcomes you to worship with us. Our liturgy schedule is as follows: Worship schedule: Saturday Vigil 5 p.m., Sunday 8 a.m. (Spanish), 10:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. Mon-Fri: 9 a.m. Office hours 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. from Mon-Fri. Closed Tuesday. Sunday school 9 a.m. (435) 882-3860. Elementary and Jr. High- (435) 882-0081. Call 435-882-3860. St. Marguerite Catholic Elementary School can be reached at 435-882-0081. We are located on the corner of Seventh Street and Vine Street.

Brit-Ammi KahalCovenant People Assembly are teach-ing the Hebrew roots of the Christian faith. Visitors welcome on Saturdays at 1 p.m., 37 S. Main Street, Tooele. Call 843-5444 for more information.

Bible Baptist ChurchThe folks at Bible Baptist Church would like to invite you to some old fashioned church services with singing from the old fashioned hymns and messages from the old fashioned KJV Bible. Some things should never change. Sunday Service times: Sunday School, 10 a.m.; gospel hour, 11 a.m.; Bible study, 12:30 p.m.; Wednesday evening services, 6 p.m. Contact Pastor Jeff Sinner at 840-2152.

Mountain View Baptist ChurchWe would like to invite you to discover what God’s plan and purpose is for your life. The Bible contains all of the answers for life’s questions. Come and join us this Sunday for our adult Bible study and graded Sunday School which starts at 9:45 a.m. Our worship service begins at 11 a.m. We also have a Bible study time each Sunday at 6 p.m. We meet on Wednesdays at 7 p.m. for prayer time. Bring your needs and let us pray together for God’s help. Mountain View Baptist Church meets at the Eastgate Plaza in Grantsville, Suite 2C. Join us.

Stansbury Park Baptist ChurchPlease join us each Sunday morning at 10 a.m. for Worship Services and Bible Study at the Stansbury Park Clubhouse (next to the SP Swimming Pool). For details, please call us at 830-1868 or go to www.stansburyparkbc.org.

First Lutheran ChurchFirst Lutheran Church, on the corner of 7th and Birch, would like to invite you to hear of God’s grace and the love of Christ, who died to forgive you of your sins and attain salvation on your behalf. Worship at 10 a.m., Sunday School at 11:15 a.m.

New Life Christian FellowshipWe invite you to worship and serve Jesus with us. Our clothing closet and food pantry is open from noon to 3 p.m. every Tuesday to Thursday at 411 E. Utah Ave. Programs for kids, teens, women and men are also available every week. Sunday services are in the Stansbury High School café at 10 a.m. and at our Tooele building at 9 a.m., 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Come join us. Find out more by calling 843-7430 or visiting www.NLOT.org.

Tooele Christian FellowshipSunday School 9:45 a.m., Worship Service 11 a.m. Services are held at 40 N. Main, former Stowes Family Music building. For more information, call 435-224-3392 or www.tooelechristianfellow-ship.org. Parking and entrance in back of building.

CharityMedical equipment neededThe Grantsville Senior Center in need of donated medical equipment to be used for seniors in need. New or gently used items needed are wheelchairs, walkers, canes or other items that may be useful to our seniors. Contact Dan Lawrence, 435-843-4753, at the Grantsville center.

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

Damian’s ClosetBring a new toy to the Tooele Pizza Hut during the month of November and receive a free order of breadsticks! All toys will be donated to Damian’s Closet, which will help children this Christmas.

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.

The Tooele Valley Resource CenterThe Tooele Valley Resource Center is currently in need of donations. Please consider donating items such as deodor-ant, chapstick, lotion, diapers, formula, toilet paper, shampoo, conditioner, combs and brushes. Cash is also welcomed. Those who receive services include individuals or families in crisis, the homeless and families at risk of becoming homeless. Located 23 S. Main Street, 843-9945.

First Baptist Food PantryThe First Baptist Church in Tooele is offering an emergency food pantry to meet the needs of our community. The food pantry is available for emergency needs. Hours of operation are Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon. We are located at 580 S. Main Street. For information call 882-2048.

DAV Chapter 20The DAV will hold its monthly EC meet-ing from 7:30-8 p.m. on the second Thursday of each month at the Pioneer Museum. The general membership chap-ter meeting will follow from 8-9 p.m. In addition, the DAV is looking for three volunteer drivers. No DAV membership is required. Will need a VA physical. Call Jim Yale at 435-849-0521 or 882-7626. Or call Les Peterson at 435-830-7812.

Blood drivesThe American Red Cross will be holding blood drives in Stansbury Park on Nov. 29 from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. at the Stansbury Park Utah South Stake Center, 240 Interlochen Lane. The Red Cross also will hold a blood drive in Tooele on Nov. 22 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. at Denny’s Restaurant, 925 North Main Street, as well as Dec. 5 from 3:30-8 p.m. at the Tooele Valley View Stake-Pinehurst Building, 196 North Pinehurst Avenue. For more information and scheduling, visit redcrossblood.org or call 800-RED-CROSS.

Toys for TotsThe Toys for Tots Karaoke Contest is Saturday, Nov. 22 at the Dow James Building. It is open to all ages. There is an Open Mic from 4-5 p.m. and Contest from 5-8 p.m. Prizes to winners in each division. Entry fee is at least one new toy for a boy or girl. Food and fun on site. Please come help make a Tooele family’s Christmas. For more informa-tion call Karli at 435-849-3673 or to enter the contest call Hollie at 435-830-7601. Karaoke provided by Ron & Chris Baum’s Dead End Alley Entertainment.

The Tooele County Food Bank & Grantsville Emergency Food PantryThe Tooele County Food Bank and Grantsville Emergency Food Pantry are in need of canned meats, soups, pasta and any non-perishable foods. We are accepting donations for Pathways Women’s and Children’s Shelter (victims of domestic abuse). They are in need of socks, underwear blankets for twin beds, hygiene products (hairspray, hair gel, body wash, nail polish and remover, toys. Anything will be appreciated. Underwear and socks must be new. Other items can be gently used. Please help us help our community. Drop boxes are located in the Intermountain Staffing Office, 7 South Main Street #203, Tooele, UT 84074.

Eagles Eagles Monday Night FootballThe Eagles will have a get together each Monday night during the football sea-son. There will be light luncheon avail-able for a minimal price and the 50/50. Come participate. The drawing will be at 7 p.m. Members only.

BreakfastsSunday breakfasts will be served every Sunday this month. Please use the cost and menu information the same as last month. Public invited.

Cancer fund potato barAuxiliary Cancer Fund Chairman Diana Lujan will have another Potato Bar on Saturday, November 22, 2014, at 6:00 P.M. The cost is $7.00 per person. There will be a raffle. All proceeds will go to the Cancer Fund.

Aerie By-Law ChangeAll members of the Tooele Eagles Aerie #164 are invited to attend the regular meeting on Thursday, Nov. 20 at 8 p.m. to vote on a by-law change. Please, brothers, come out and vote on this change.

Needy Kids Christmas Stocking Auction and Stocking RaffleIt is that time of year again when the Eagles have a fundraiser to help pro-vide needy kids with a Christmas. Fill a stocking, basket, etc. for kids, pets or adults and bring it to the lodge on or before Friday, Dec. 5 at 8:30 p.m. and an unwrapped toy for the 6-foot stocking on the raffle. The auction will start at that time and the winner of the 6-foot stocking full of toys will go to the Needy Kids’ Xmas Fund and will be used to take these kids to shop with a soldier that would not otherwise have a Christmas. All members and guest are invited to atend and support this most worthwhile activity.

Moose LodgeMeals at the LodgeFriday and Saturday night dinners will be served from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday night dinners include clam chowder or homemade soup, and/or fish baskets (halibut, shrimp), or chicken strips. Saturday night dinners include 16-ounce ribeye or T-bone steak with choice of baked potato/fries, salad and roll; halibut or salmon steak with choice of baked or fries, salad and roll, or Jumbo shrimp with choice of baked or fries, salad and roll. All meals are for a rea-sonable price. No orders are taken after 8:45. Daily lunch specials are available at the lodge from 11a.m. After purchase of 10 (ten) meals either Friday/Saturday nights you get a free one. For members and their guests only.EntertainmentThe John Boys will play Friday, Nov. 21 from 6-8 p.m. during dinner. The band Flashback will play live on Saturday, Nov. 22 from 7-11 p.m. For members and their guests.

Suicide survivorsThere will be a Suicide Survivors meet-ing Saturday, Nov. 22 from 10:30 a.m.-noon.

Lodge closedThe Moose Lodge will be closed Thursday, Nov. 27 in observance of Thanksgiving.

Kids Christmas PartyThe Moose Lodge’s annual Kids Christmas Party will take place Saturday, Dec. 13 from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Bring you kids, grandkids and great-grandkids to meet Santa. For members and their guests only.

Tooele County Historical SocietyHistorical booksTooele County Historical Society’s books will be available to purchase at our meeting. The History of Tooele County Volume II is $30, The Mining, Smelting, and Railroading in Tooele is $20, and we also have eight note cards depicting four different pioneer buildings for $4. These will make great gifts for your fam-ily and friends. Please call Alice Dale at 882-1612 if you would like to purchase these books.

Seeking Historical ItemsTooele 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 orga-nization to please call us. We are also looking for books, newspaper articles, photos, brochures 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 Alice Dale at 435-882-1612.

Elks LodgeMealsThere will be fresh halibut served at the Tooele Elks Lodge on Friday, Nov. 21 from 6-9 p.m. In addition, there will be no Friday night dinner on Nov. 28.

Groups and eventsLocal author seeks photosA local author and historian is seeking original photographs of Saltaire, 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 contrib-ute 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.

MasonsMasons meeting second Friday at 7 p.m. with dinner at 6 p.m., 22 Settlement Canyon, Tooele. Breakfast on the second Saturday, 9 a.m., Jim’s Cafe. For more information or a ride, call Blair 801-554-0527.

Tooele Valley Family History CenterResearch your ancestors free with trained FamilySearch 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.

Recovery InternationalThe power to change. Meetings are held in the Grantsville Library at 42 N. Bowery at 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, the Grantsville Senior Center at 120 S. Center at 1 p.m. Tuesdays, and the Methodist Church, 78 E. Utah Ave. in Tooele, at 3 p.m. Fridays. For more information, call MaryAnn 884-0215.

Overeaters AnonymousOur meetings are in a new/permanent time and space on Saturdays at 3:30p.m. at the Tooele Pioneer Museum, 47 E. Vine Street in Tooele (enter back door off of Garden Street). Overeaters Anonymous is a fellowship of individu-als who, through shared experience, strength and hope are recovering from compulsive eating. There are no dues or fees for membership. We welcome everyone who has a desire to stop eat-ing compulsively. Contact Cheryl (435) 496-0266 or Liz (801) 915-8404.

Take Off Pounds SensiblyGive yourself the gift of health and wellness. Resolve to lose those extra pounds. TOPS can help you achieve your goals and support you in your journey. We provide accountability through week-ly weigh-ins and support and encourage-ment in a non-judgmental environment. TOPS is open to all men, women, teens and preteens. There are now two TOPS chapters in Tooele to accommodate your schedule. UT 330 Tooele meets Tuesday at Cornerstone Baptist Church, 276 E. 500 North. Weigh in from 5:30-6 p.m., meeting at 6 p.m. Call Mary Lou at 830-1150 for information. UT 365 Tooele meets Saturday at 10 a.m. at the Bit n Spur Clubhouse, 240 W. 500 North. This chapter will meet occasionally at a private residence, so call ahead for the exact location. Call Lisa at 882-1442 for information. Also see the TOPS website at www.tops.org.

Tooele Gem and Mineral SocietyOur Club meets the second Tuesday of the month at the Tooele Applied Technology College (TATC) Auditorium at 88 S. Tooele Blvd, Tooele. Come learn about rocks, minerals and ways to craft with them and enjoy field trips for rock collecting. Membership $10 per year. Visit us on Facebook or www.tooelegem.com. Contact info: 435-882-5752 email [email protected]

Sons of Utah PioneersThe goals of the Sons of Utah Pioneers

Settlement Canyon Chapter is to keep our pioneer heritage alive. We do this through histories, stories, artifacts, monuments, museums, service and scholarships. Much of this labor of love is found in the Tooele Pioneer Museum at 47 E. Vine in Tooele, as well as vari-ous statues and monuments around the county. The Tooele Pioneer cemetery, at the mouth of Settlement Canyon, is another of our projects. We are always looking for artifacts and histories, including yearbooks, as a loan or gift to be displayed for everyone’s benefit at the Tooele Pioneer Museum. If you are interested in the values of honoring past and future pioneers and in visiting their historical settings and learning more about those who settled and shaped Utah, attend our business and educa-tion meeting the first Thursday of each month. A pot-luck dinner followed by various presentations starts promptly at 6:30 p.m. in the Tooele Senior Citizens Center at 53 E. Vine. Call Gene White at 435-882-0805 for additional informa-tion.

Mood disorder support groupDo you or someone you love have a mood disorder? NAMI-Tooele affiliation offers help, hope and healing. Please join us for support group sessions every Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. at the New Reflection Clubhouse on 900 South in Tooele. For more info, contact Kelly at 841-9903.

PFCCAThe Professional Family Child Care Association of Utah will be holding Chapter Meetings in Tooele the fourth Tuesday of each month from 7-9 p.m. This support group/training meeting is open to all childcare providers in Stockton, Tooele, Erda, Stansbury, Grantsville and Lake Point. For more information, call Kathy Witt, 435-830-9614.

Tooele Family Al-AnonWednesdays at 11 a.m. at 77 W. 400 North. For questions or more informa-tion, please call Allene at (435)830-0465 or Elizabeth at (435)884-0825 or (435)241-9200.

Food Addicts in Recovery AnonymousFood Addicts in Recovery Anonymous is a program based on the 12 steps of AA. FA is a fellowship of individuals who through shared experiences and mutual support are recovering from the disease of food addiction. Meetings are held every Thursday at 6 p.m. at the Pioneer Museum, 47 East Vine Street, Tooele, Utah. Enter at back entrance on north side of building. For more information contact Millicent at 435-882-7094 or Steve C. at 435-841-1458.

Tooele County AgingTooele County Aging is looking for vol-unteers to help us meet the needs of Seniors in the community. Many seniors require assistance and need rides to doctors or other health professionals. Rides help seniors live more indepen-dent lives. Call Holly at 435-843-4102 for more information. The Grantsville and Tooele Senior Centers also are in need of volunteers. For more informa-tion about volunteering at the Grantsville Center, call Dan at 435-843-4753. For volunteering at the Tooele Center, call Debbie at 435-843-4103.

The Bulletin BoardTHURSDAY November 20, 2014B6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

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 advertis-ing department. Please limit your notice to 60 words or less. The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin cannot guarantee your announcement will be printed. To guarantee your announcement please call the advertising department at 882-0050. Information must be delivered no later than 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

The Stepmother (Amy Gebs) and stepsisters (Katherine Hawley and Renee Fowler) stand on the sidelines at the ball while the prince is captivated by the princess in Tooele High’s production of The Slipper and the Rose. The show will debut this Friday at 7 p.m. in the Tooele High School auditorium, with additional evening shows on Nov. 15, 17, 18, 19, 21 and 24.

B6 BULLETIN BOARDB6 BULLETIN BOARD

THURSDAY November 20, 2014 B7TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

What if you could ask a skunk any question you wanted? What would you ask? Kid Scoop spoke with skunk authority P.U. Stenchmuch to learn about these smelly creatures from a safe distance.

To find each answer, start at the compass square each time and follow the directions.

Q: How far can skunks spray?A: Start at compass. Go 1 square north, then 1 square west.

Q: Do skunks ever run out of stinky spray?A: Start at compass. Go 3 squares north, then 1 square west, then 1 square north.

Q: Where is the skunk’s secret weapon?A: Start at compass. Go 3 squares north. Next, go 1 square east. Then go 1 square south.

Q: What color is the musk skunks spray?A: Start at compass. Go 4 squares north. Then go 1 square west. Next, go 1 square south.

Q: What are baby skunks called?A: Start at compass, go 2 squares north.

Q: What is another name for a skunk?A: Start at compass and go 1 square north. Next, go 1 square west. Then go 2 squares north and then 1 east.

Q: A skunk is about the same size as a ____________.A: From compass, go 2 squares north. Then, go 1 east and 1 south.

Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Use context to understand meaning.

Black & White and Read All OverSelect a page of the newspaper. Find all of the words you can read, and

if you know what they mean, circle them in red.

There are three kinds of skunks. Do the math problems to match the name of each kind of skunk with its description.

We skunks are shy and gentle creatures. Yet the sight of a skunk is a fearful sight to many animals!

That’s because skunks have a powerful and

stinky weapon right under our tails – a VERY stinky spray!

We hiss and stamp our feet. If this doesn’t work, we raise our tail over

our head as a threat.

If those warnings don’t

work, well, LOOK OUT!

However, we only use this weapon when threatened.

Even then, we do everything

possible to avoid sending the final

stinky spray.

23. The face is black except for one white stripe that runs from the nose to the shoulders. At the shoulders, the stripe splits in two parts, one running down each side of the body.

15. It has a broad, hairless muzzle, like that of a pig. The back and tail are white.

10. The smallest of all skunks, it has a dot in the middle of its forehead. The stripes go in lots of different and wiggly directions.

Standards Link: Life Science: There is variation among individuals of one kind within a population.

Standards Link: Social Science: Students use map skills to find the absolute locations of places.

© 2014 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 30, No. 49

Make a list of words that describe how things smell – for example: odor, putrid, musty, sour. Using one page of the newspaper, have students find and circle the letters that spell five of the smelly words.Standards Link: Vocabulary: Understand and explain synonyms. Reading Comprehension: Follow multiple step directions.

Stinky Words

ANSWER: A phew!

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Find the words in the puzzle, then in this week’s Kid Scoop

stories and activities.

Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognizing identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.

SKUNKSSMELLYSTINKERPUTRIDCOMPASSMUSTYDISTANCEWEAPONSOURPOLECATBLACKMARKINGSWHITEWESTSTRIPESStandards Link: Investigation: Find similarities and differences in common objects.

Lots of animals have bodies that blend into the world around them. This is called camouflage. But the bold black and white markings on a skunk make them easy to spot. They don’t need to hide. Other animals know to leave them alone.

Find the differences between the two pictures.

Oops! Someone put some of the capital letters in the wrong places. Read the article below. Circle the mistakes and underline the letters that should be capitalized.

an Ojibwa legend Tells the

story of a Hunter and his wife

who lived on the Shores of

lake michigan.

one day, the hunter’s wife

caught a Beaver by the Tail

and called to her husband to

come and kill it before it could

escape. but the hunter refused.

He had already killed many

beaver in his Traps and said if

he killed Another one, The

others would all run away.

she let the beaver go but she

was very Angry and that

Night, When her husband had

gone to sleep, she ran away.

the next morning the Hunter

saw her Tracks in the snow

and feeling badly about their

quarrel, decided to follow

them. as he followed the

tracks, They gradually

changed and became the

tracks of a Skunk. the trail

ended in a Marsh where there

were many skunks.

he turned and went home but

called the Place, “The Place of

the Skunk” and it is where

chicago now stands.

Chi Ca Go

Complete the grid by using all the letters in the word SPRAY in each vertical and horizontal row. Each letter should only be used once in each row. Some spaces have been filled in for you.

Tell a tale of a little stinker!

KID SCOOP B7KID SCOOP B7

THURSDAY November 20, 2014

SHS continued from page B1

PHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINB8

Above, Stansbury junior Alyssa Guymon prepares to serve dur-

ing a doubles match. Right, Dallon Allred sinks a putt.

Above, Stansbury’s McCoy Didericksen

(5) looks for running room. Right, Jessica

Basset spikes the ball during a match against

Grantsville. Below, Stansbury goalkeeper

Natalie Memmott clears the ball with a drop kick.

B8

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B8

THURSDAY November 20, 2014 C1TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

When most people think of fall, lemon-ade does not come

to mind -- or key lime pie, or even orange juice or fresh grapefruits. But the truth of nature is that, although all citrus plants fruit at slightly different times, late fall is the beginning of citrus season. Many varieties of citrus, hav-ing traveled hundreds or even thousands miles from their snowbird homes, are showing up in grocery stores across the country.

Citrus flavors appear in many traditional foods of the season. The candied citrus in fruit cakes, orange juice in glazed carrots and the lemon zest and peel in baked goods have become the ubiquitous flavors of fall and winter. Because the flavor of citrus is so refreshing, it’s no surprise that we also adore it when times are hot. If you want to taste the very best citrus of the season, find the heaviest, sweetest orange imaginable, or the sweet peel and lip-pucker-ing center of a kumquat, or the surprisingly nectar-like fruit of a beautiful pink grapefruit.

Citrus trees of every kind are a subtropical plant, and prone to freezing in the winter months. Many home gardeners in every state try their luck at growing citrus, usually dwarf varieties that they can protect from frost. However, com-mercially, citrus in the United States is grown mainly in California and Florida, where the weather is to its liking.

In both states, citrus farm-ing began in the 1800s. In California, during the Gold Rush of 1849 there was a huge demand for oranges that were used to combat scurvy, which is a vitamin C deficiency. In Florida, the citrus industry is worth billions of dollars to the state, where it produces more oranges than anyplace else in the world. But long before commercial farming of orang-es, lemons and the almost countless other varieties of cit-rus, citrus trees were growing in the Americas in the 1500s, brought in by the Spaniards.

Citrus of all kinds is high in vitamin C, and it is also a good source of other essential nutrients such as potassium, folate, calcium and phospho-rus. Citrus is considered a nutrient-dense food and often is prescribed by doctors and dietitians for the prevention and treatment of many illness-es and disorders.

Even though most of us have a favorite lemon- or orange-infused dish, citrus season is the time to try a new variety in a new way. The wonder-ful juice of almost any citrus fruit can replace the vinegar

in a salad dressing, while the plump, juicy flesh itself can be the focal point of a salad or dessert. Surprise your family during this holiday season and put citrus on the menu. It will become a tradition.

SPICED TURKEY CUTLETS WITH GRAPEFRUIT RELISH

Honey-Grapefruit Relish3 large seedless grapefruit1 avocado, peeled, pitted

and diced1/4 cup thinly sliced red

onion2 tablespoons chopped fresh

cilantro1 tablespoon honey or agave

syrup1 teaspoon salt1 teaspoon black pepper

Spice Rub for Turkey or Chicken

1/4 cup mild chili powder2 tablespoons ground cumin1/2 teaspoon ground cloves1/2 teaspoon ground ginger1/2 teaspoon ground cin-

namon1/2 teaspoon salt1/8 teaspoon cayenne pep-

per1 1/2 pounds turkey cutlets

(about 1/4 inch thick) or 4 thin, boneless, skinless chicken breasts

Cooking oil spray3 tablespoons canola oil

1. Preheat oven to 400 F.2. Using a sharp knife,

remove skin and white pith from grapefruit and discard. Cut grapefruit segments from the surrounding membrane,

letting them drop into a medi-um-size bowl. Squeeze juice of the remaining flesh of grape-fruit membrane into the bowl. Add avocados, onions, cilantro, honey, salt and black pepper. Toss well to combine; set aside.

3. Stir together chili powder, cumin, cloves, ginger, cin-namon, salt and cayenne in a shallow dish. Lightly spray both sides of the meat with cooking oil spray. Dredge the cutlets or breasts in spice mix-ture, shaking off excess.

4. Heat oil in a large oven-proof skillet over medium-high heat. Add cutlets or breasts and cook, shaking the pan, until they begin to brown on the outside, about 1 to 2 min-utes. Turn the meat over and transfer skillet to the oven.

Bake until no longer pink in the center, 6 to 8 minutes.

5. Arrange meat on a platter or individual plates and spoon avocado-grapefruit relish on top. Makes 6 servings.

Visit Angela Shelf Medearis’ website at www.divapro.com. To see how-to videos, recipes and much, much more, Like Angela Shelf Medearis, The Kitchen Diva! on Facebook and go to Hulu.com. Read Gina Harlow’s blog about food and gardening at www.peache-sandprosciutto.com. Recipes may not be reprinted without permission from Angela Shelf Medearis.

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc., and Angela Shelf Medearis

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THURSDAY November 20, 2014C2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

ACROSS 1 Disparage 9 Nassau’s nation 16 Spot’s pal 20 Old gas giant 21 Acre native 22 Mac OS X is based on it 23 Lucy’s hubby creates a

portrait of an Egyptian Nobelist?

25 Sitar master Shankar 26 Doesn’t split 27 First-time Net surfer 28 Classic cookie

30 Enshrouded 31 Singer Cline dupes

singer Ross? 36 One in a tippy boat 41 Grin widely 42 Baker’s — 43 Spaghetti that smells

and tastes terrible? 50 Aviary abode 51 Company with a spokes-

duck 52 Big name in champagne 53 “Faust” playwright 55 Like a sure-to-succeed

proposition 57 Impart fizz to 58 “Drop — line sometime” 61 Slightly 64 Declaration from one

who abducts alley prowlers?

68 Food-conducting plant tissue

70 Author Levin 71 Third note in the A

major scale 72 Soreness causes shaggy

ox to lose focus?

79 Iowa city 80 Use a rocker 81 Fetus holder 82 Brother of Gretel 84 Eugene O’Neill’s “The —

Cometh” 85 Like quilts 86 Gravitates 90 Additionally 93 Salsa can be found on

the platter of munchies? 97 Sonnet writers, say 99 “99 Luftballons” band 100 Valuables 101 Model Banks opts not to

take Tums? 108 Slap handcuffs on 109 Pop’s mama 110 River in Russia 111 “— bleu!” (French “Holy

cow!”) 116 Kazan with three Tonys 118 Observance “shuffled” in

this puzzle 123 Put a fork in 124 Provider of funds 125 Dog flea, e.g. 126 Match up, as timepieces 127 Like grasslands 128 Some small pooches

DOWN 1 Gin mills 2 Release 3 “Livin’ La Vida —” 4 Totally gross 5 Playthings 6 Highest-rated 7 Tropical vine 8 Author T.S. 9 Gradually

10 Talking biblical beast 11 Wk.’s 168 12 Org. aiding stranded

motorists 13 French red wine 14 Happy as — 15 Locales 16 Dog covering 17 Befuddled 18 Discovers intuitively 19 It causes rust 24 Thumbs-down votes 29 Like 1 or 3 31 Nose around 32 Koppel of news 33 Jail sentence 34 Mental pictures 35 Skye of film 36 Civil War org. 37 Anti-moonshine org. 38 Naught 39 Ad infinitum 40 Kitchen utensil brand 44 Berserk 45 Mozart’s “— Fan Tutte” 46 Marsh plant 47 Categorize 48 Rend 49 Assails 54 Attention-getting calls 56 Restricted 57 Give — on the back 58 What to call a lady 59 French I verb 60 Nile biters 61 Downloads for iPhones 62 Asian cuisine 63 Came to rest 65 Vardalos and Long 66 Bit of a circle

67 Huts in the Swiss Alps 69 Concern of a PTA: Abbr. 73 Big hauler 74 Web, to a fly 75 Altercations 76 “— Leaving Home” 77 Exhibit ennui 78 Court star Kournikova 83 Deer kin 84 Greek vowel 85 Collection of busts, e.g. 87 “Is” pluralized 88 Turner of a rebellion 89 Part of MS-DOS: Abbr. 90 Suitability 91 Allegiance 92 Certain Slav 94 Mermaid site 95 “Maisie” star Sothern 96 Ill-bred dude 98 Tax form ID 102 DJ Casey 103 Asinine 104 — visit (dropped by) 105 Mastery 106 Grouses 107 Near the hip 111 Game with 32 cards 112 Admin. aide 113 Roman 402 114 $5/hour, e.g. 115 Glimpses 117 “20/20” airer 119 Doze (off) 120 One and one 121 Basilica seat 122 — -Magnon

Super Crossword IRISH SHUFFLE

Answers on C4 Answers on C4

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Puzzle #2750-D

Difficult

1 2 34 3 5

6 7 87 8 3 1

3 22 9 5 6

2 7 96 4 35 1 2

Sudoku

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Puzzle #2750-M

Medium

1 2 34 1 5 67 8 4

8 1 33 5 2 6 7 8

9 4 3

2 6 39 3 7 4

8 9 1

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Inspiring Healthy LivesLook for it every month in your

Tooele Transcript Bulletin

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELE

THURSDAY November 20, 2014 C3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

DEAR DR. ROACH: Medical advice is to reduce sugar con-sumption. Does this apply to 100 percent fruit juices, fresh fruit, sweetened cereal products or other fruit-sweetened prod-ucts? — R.B.

ANSWER: I think it makes sense to limit sugar intake, as most North Americans take in remarkably large quantities of sugar. Recently, while giving a lecture at the medical school, I noticed that the carbon-ated sodas served contained 45 grams of added sugar per can. That’s more than the American Heart Association recommends in a day (no more than 25 grams of added sugar per day for women, 40 grams a day for men)! Be careful of products that claim to be sweetened by fruit juice or fruit sugar; this still counts as added sugar.

I do make an exception for fruits, as the body processes nat-ural sugars from fruit differently.

You can try this out at home by eating four medium-size oranges or drinking its equiva-lent in an 8-ounce (250 ml) glass of orange juice. I think you will find a big difference in how full you feel.

Although reducing sugar is critical for diabetics and is very important for anyone trying to lose weight, even for people with no sugar or weight problems, the evidence is accumulating that eating too much added sugar increases future risk for heart disease and diabetes.

Diabetes has become epidem-ic in North America. The booklet on it provides insight on its diag-nosis and treatment. Readers can order a copy by writing: Dr. Roach — No. 402W, Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. Enclose a check or money order (no cash) for $4.75 U.S./$6 Canada with the recipient’s printed name and address. Please allow four weeks for delivery.

• • •DEAR DR. ROACH: My wife

has wet AMD. Her ophthalmolo-gist gave her some vitamins (to take three times a day). They include 25 mg of zinc oxide. She has read somewhere that women should not take more than 8 mg of zinc a day. These vitamins would total 75 mg daily. Are zinc and zinc oxide the same? Can she take these vita-mins? — J.N.

ANSWER: The usual dose of

zinc for age-related macular degeneration is 80 mg daily of zinc oxide. Twenty-three percent of zinc oxide is elemental zinc, so this is about 18 mg of ele-mental zinc. The ophthalmolo-gist is giving a very standard and safe dose for AMD.

The U.S. recommended daily allowance for zinc is 11 mg for men, 8 mg for women. Very high doses of zinc can be dangerous, but this dose is still in the safe zone.

• • •Dr. Roach regrets that he is

unable to answer individual let-ters, but will incorporate them in the column whenever pos-sible. Readers may email ques-tions to [email protected]. To view and order health pamphlets, visit www.rbmamall.com, or write to P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475.© 2014 North America Synd., Inc.All Rights Reserved

by Samantha Weaver

• It was beloved American poet Ralph Waldo Emerson who made the following sage observation: Sometimes a scream is better than a thesis.

• As the holidays and the inevitable family gatherings approach, you might want to prepare yourself to engage in logomachy — a battle fought with words.

• In the African nation of Swaziland, it is illegal for a witch to fly a broomstick at an altitude above 150 meters.

• If you’re like 91 percent of Americans, you sometimes eat breakfast for dinner.

• You may have been unaware of it for the past 11 months, but 2014 has been the International Year of Family Farming, so declared by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.

• Place-names sometimes enter the English language through roundabout means. Take Arkansas, for instance:

That state’s name comes from the word akansa, which is a French pronunciation of an Algonquin name for the Native American Quapaw people. The original word means either “people of the south wind” or “downriver people.”

• You might be surprised to learn that the fax machine was invented in the 19th cen-tury. In 1843, a man named Alexander Bain patented Bain’s Telegraph, which was able to transmit an exact copy of lines, letters and shapes to chemically treated paper on the other end of the line.

• In 2013, for the first time, the United States offered a larger market for wine than France.

• • •

Thought for the Day: All one’s life as a young woman one is on show, a focus of attention, people notice you. You set yourself up to be noticed and admired. And then, not expecting it, you become middle-aged and anonymous. No one notices you. You achieve a wonderful freedom. It’s a positive thing. You can move about unno-ticed and invisible.

— Doris Lessing

© 2014 North America Synd., Inc.

I’d like to meet the young child who discovered that slathering a rainbow of col-

orful poster paints on the under-side of the hand and pressing it on paper creates a turkey print — that iconic imprint that every preschooler in America would delight in making for decades of November’s to come.

If your kids are now older but are still interested in doing “Turkey Day” crafts, let them create adorable handprint-inspired turkeys with inexpen-sive stretch knit gloves. (Or, use

stray gloves that have lost their mate.)

Decorate the stuffed turkeys with flair to give them distinct personalities, and they’ll soon be doing a turkey trot up and

down your Thanksgiving din-ner table to amuse your happy guests.

Here’s the stuff you’ll need:• Inexpensive stretch knit

gloves in a solid color, or choose fashion knit stretch gloves with designs that will enhance the personality of your turkey (avail-able at discount and dollar stores)

• Polyester fill, or cut-up scraps of an old T-shirt

• Sturdy cardboard cut into a circle 3 inches in diameter

• Craft supplies such as feath-ers, googly eyes, ribbons and pipe cleaners

• Low-temperature glue gun or household glue

Here’s the fun:1. Fill the stretch glove with

the polyester fill or fabric scraps. 2. Tuck the cardboard disk

into the cuff below the stuffing to create a base. Set the “turkey” upright on the base.

3. Glue on eyes, feathers and other features. For extra detail, use felt for a beak, and pieces of pipe cleaner for a wattle. Use a thimble for a whimsical pilgrim hat, and a ribbon for a tie.

4. Display anywhere around your home, or set it on the Thanksgiving buffet or dinner table. If you have a kids’ table, set the turkey on a platter with fall leaves strewn around for a cute centerpiece.

The turkey will stand extra tall if you remove the cardboard disk and cinch the cuff around the base of an upside-down goblet or wine glass.

• • •Donna Erickson’s award-

winning series “Donna’s Day” is airing on public television nationwide. To find more of her creative family recipes and activ-ities, visit www.donnasday.com and link to the NEW Donna’s Day Facebook fan page. Her lat-est book is “Donna Erickson’s Fabulous Funstuff for Families.”

© 2014 Donna EricksonDistributed by King Features Synd.

Does limiting sugar include fruit?

Stuff glove turkeys for thanksgiving decor

Keanu Reeves, 50, isn’t slowing down a bit. Despite “47 Ronin”

(which cost $175 million and only made $151 million), his recent “John Wick” fared bet-ter (costing $25 million, taking in $40 million). He completed “The Whole Truth” with Renee Zellweger and Jim Belushi, due out in 2015, and the Belgium thriller “Knock, Knock,” which Eli Roth directed, for October release. Now he’s returning to the sci-fi genre in “Replicas,” about a man who will stop at nothing to bring his family back from the dead.

• • •The “Frozen” phenomenon

continues. The film made $1.27 billion at the box office, the Blu-Ray combo sold 8 mil-lion copies worldwide and the CD sold 3 million copies. Now most major outlets are selling Elsa/Anna dresses, designed to look like those worn in the film, with prices ranging from $13 to $124. The demand has been so great, some are being sold on eBay for as much as $1,000.

• • •The holidays are upon

us. To make your shopping easier we suggest some duets that are sure to please. First, Barbra Streisand’s new CD, “Partners,” by far the best she’s done in years. Barbra sings duets with 12 popular male singers. Among the favorites are “It had To Be You”(Michael Buble), “People” (Stevie Wonder), “New York State of Mind” (Billy Joel), “How Deep Is the Ocean” (with her son, Jason Gould), “Somewhere” (Josh Groban) and “Love Me

Tender” (Elvis Presley). Next, Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga take on “Anything Goes,” “Cheek to Cheek,” “Nature Boy” and “I Can’t Give You Anything But Love,” among others. And finally, Barry Manilow’s “My Dream Duets,” for which Manilow took only the vocals and rearranged and re-orchestrated the songs to perfection. He duets on “The Songs Gotta Come from the Heart” (Jimmy Durante), “Dream a Little Dream of Me” (Mama Cass), “I Believe in You and Me” (Whitney Houston), “Sunshine on My Shoulders” (John Denver), “Zing Went the Strings of My Heart” (Judy Garland), “Moon River” (Andy Williams), “The Look of Love” (Dusty Springfield), “The Candyman” (Sammy Davis, Jr.), “I Want to Be Loved by You” (Marilyn Monroe) and “What a Wonderful World” (Louis Armstrong).

• • •Steve Soifer, CEO of The

International Paruresis Association, wants DirecTV to stop running the Rob Lowe ads where his meeker self professes to be a shy-bladder sufferer. DirecTV’s representa-tive Darris Gringeri claims, “The ads will continue to run for the vast majority of view-ers who told us they enjoy the spots and understand that like all our commercials, they take place in a fantasy world and are not based in reality.” Whoever thought “pee-shy” people would form an associa-tion with each other!

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

Keanu Reeves

A Department of Veterans Affairs benefits program recently hit a milestone:

It guaranteed its 21 millionth home loan for veterans. The program started 70 years ago in 1944 as part of the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act (the GI Bill).

In fiscal year 2014 alone, the VA guaranteed over 438,000 home loans, or an average of 35,000 per month. As part of the program, grants were made to more than 1,200 disabled veterans to buy or modify a home to meet their needs.

If you’re ready to use your VA eligibility to buy a home, here are a few things you need to know:

You can get your Certificate of Eligibility at www.ebenefits.va.gov. The program is available for active duty, veterans and sur-viving spouses.

You’ll work with private lender who accepts VA loans, not the VA. Chances are you won’t need a down payment or PMI, which is private mortgage insurance. You’ll need to qualify with good credit and enough income. (Send for your credit reports from the big three reporting agencies, and clean up any problems before you apply for a loan.) Before you start shopping, have the lender determine what price range you would qualify for. The interest rate offered is likely to be below conventional rates, and there’s no pre-payment penal-ty if you want to pay off the loan early.

Go online to www.benefits.va.gov/homeloans to see which documenta-tion you’ll need. If

you don’t have access to a com-puter to get the Certificate of Eligibility, call 1-800-827-1000, or ask your lender to access the sys-tem and get it for you.

If you currently have a VA loan, the Cash Out Refinance program lets you take cash out of your equity to pay off debts or go to school. The Interest Rate Reduction Refinance Loan, aka the Streamline Refinance Loan, can help you get a lower interest rate.

• • •Freddy Groves regrets that he

cannot personally answer reader questions, but will incorporate them into his column whenever possible. Send email to [email protected].

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

He’s cool in the way cool people wish they were cool — think Frank

Sinatra to Dean Martin, John Lennon to Bob Dylan, or Jack White to Jimmy Page as non-sporting examples. Just look at him ... moving a touch slower than the guys he showed up with. They’re running like it’s a five-alarm fire, helpless bystanders all around them are screaming their heads off and as if things couldn’t get more harrowing, lions, bears and marauding Vikings are directly in their path and coming their way.

“Relax,” he tells everyone as he nonchalantly traipses over to them, patting one of them on the back. He surveys the scene and takes the time to light up a smoke as if he had all the time in the world and today was just a Saturday in the park.

Only it’s not a park, it’s Lambeau Field. And those aren’t bystanders, they are Packer Backers, just as those aren’t mere lions, bears and Vikings, they are those who are about to be vanquished. For when he yells “hike!” it resounds in ways that strike fear in the hearts of those who oppose him, for it is a clari-on call that precedes their doom.

The once mild-mannered, sleepy-eyed man who looked like a guy you’d strike up a casual conversation with on an airplane has transformed into a quarter-back of leviathan-like propor-tions. The once barren, frozen tundra becomes a raging sea of tumult and despair for those who lie in his wake. He unfurls bombs, he moves with lightning speed, laying waste to those who oppose him, the scoreboard lighted up brighter than a funeral pyre, the light at the end of the tunnel is the one that mercifully leads them out of the cauldron of misery and to their team bus,

which awaits to take them to the Valhalla that is their charter jet home.

All of which is just another way to say that Aaron Rodgers ... Yeah, he’s a pretty good quarterback.

For those who saw him extend his record a few Sunday nights ago against the Chicago Bears to 13-1 and tie an NFL record by tossing six TD passes in a half, your eyes did not deceive you: Aaron is the best there is right now, and the championship will surely run (pass?) through Lambeau this season. And for all of the talk about Luck, Manning, Rothlisberger, Brady, Rivers ... all of the talk about revolutionary quarterbacks like Kaepernick, Newton, RG III and Wilson ... Rodgers seems to dodge that conversation as if he’s above it all. He’s the guy in the club that left hours ago with the girl while everyone else is settling their tabs after last call under the bright lights of failure, wondering if they should get wings or not.

“I can promise you this is not easy,” Rodgers says. “It’s tough to execute like that.”

Not for some people, appar-ently. It doesn’t matter if you call him cool guy, the best, leviathan (and interestingly enough, he has no real nickname), you can’t be wrong when you say anything good about Rodgers as quarter-back because Rodgers ... Rodgers is that.

• • •Mark Vasto is a veteran sports-

writer who lives in Kansas City.

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

THURSDAY November 20, 2014C4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

• If you’re traveling with pets, you know you’ll need to bring something for them to drink out of. If you have ice in a container, they can lick the ice to stay hydrated, but it doesn’t slosh around or spill easily.

• For moister and softer cook-ies, use honey as a substitute for a third of the sugar in your cookie recipe.

• “At a party, someone spilled a cup of red wine on one of my throw pillows. I love the pillow, since it is just the right size and really soft, but I could not get the stain out. So I covered

it with a new fabric. I ended up doing all the assorted pil-lows in the same fabric, and it made a big change in the room. I wish I had done it sooner.” -- I.F. in Pennsylvania

• “Keep venetian blinds from sticking to one another and discourage dust by rubbing them down individually with a sheet of fabric softener. This effect will last at least a month, in my experience.” -- S.F. in Alabama

• “Have a headache? Try drink-ing a couple of glasses of a sports drink. This works for my friends and I. Maybe we just need to be drinking more water, but the sports drinks get us back on track more quickly than medicine most times.” -- E.L. in Colorado

• Bringing some plants indoors? Use styrofoam packing pea-nuts in the bottom of pots when planting. They aren’t as

heavy as rocks, but they do just as good a job. It makes the pots easier to move around should you need to.

Send your tips to Now Here’s a Tip, c/o King Features

Weekly Service, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475 or e-mail JoAnn at [email protected].

© 2014 North America Synd., Inc.

Seniors sometimes buy into the stereotypes that we’re over the hill, getting weak

and past our prime. Not only that, but we often develop nega-tive attitudes about others in our group simply because of their age.

There is at least one way to counter that negativity.

Researchers at UC Berkeley and Yale found a way to use positive subliminal messages to increase activity levels in seniors and increase physical health — and it only took a few weeks. The results were better than six months of exercise.

One hundred seniors with an

average age of 80 were divided into four groups for multiple 15-minute sessions. Some were given implicit or explicit mes-sages. Some wrote essays about being active. Some were given positive subliminal one-word messages, flashed on a com-puter screen so fast they couldn’t really be seen.

Psychological improvements

were seen in the form of more positive self-perceptions, which then improved physical strength (getting up and down from a chair, holding a pose, staying balanced and walking). The ben-efits of all those positive mes-sages lasted at least three weeks after the final session.

Only those who wrote essays didn’t see any benefits.

In two similar studies, seniors who were flashed negative subliminal messages saw lower memory performance.

Self-stereotyping about age comes at us in two batches: the first when we hit a “number” that defines us as a member of

senior group, such as collecting Social Security; the second when we ourselves start to buy into the negativity about aging by denying it as long as we can.

While we can’t flash positive subliminal messages at our-selves on a computer screen, we can seek out the positive wher-ever we are.

• • •Matilda Charles regrets that

she cannot personally answer reader questions, but will incor-porate them into her column whenever possible. Send email to [email protected].

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

Stress-free holidays: watch your spending

Home loan milestone Rodgers, that

Accentuate the positive, eliminate the negative

DVDs reviewed in this column will be available in stores the week of Dec. 1, 2014.

“The Hundred Foot Journey” (PG-13) — Madame Mallory (Helen Mirren) has dedicated herself to the painstaking per-fection of the finest restaurants in France. Much to her chagrin, Papa Kadam (Om Puri) and his family, fresh from India, decide to start a new restaurant and a new life in the rundown build-ing just across the street from Mallory’s hallowed establish-ment. Hassan is heir to his father’s Indian cooking legacy, but he’s drawn by the allure of fine French cuisine, and Madame Mallory’s sous chef (Charlotte Le Bon).

This uplifting Disney treat could have been too sweet, but comedic and dramatic talents of Mirren and Puri keep things interesting. Foodies will appreci-ate how much the camera and audio embrace the food at the heart of the story.

“Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” (PG-13) — Mankind has hit hard times, what with the virus that wiped out half of the population and the upris-ing of enraged extra-intelligent apes. Surviving humans in the remains of San Francisco must figure out what to do about the nearby Ape Army that’s settled in the woods. Is there room for both of us? Even if the leaders try to keep things cool, how long can peace last?

Just like in the prequel, you’ll find yourself sympathizing with the apes more than the people. Master motion-capture actor

Andy Serkis (who gave awesome performances for King Kong and Gollum) reprises his role as Caesar, the conflicted leader of the apes. The action sequences are big and exhilarating, and the film’s more personal moments also come through.

“As Above/So Below” (R) — Beneath Paris lies the catacombs — a miles-long twisted labyrinth walled with human remains. To one young researcher (Perdita Weeks) and her crew of tag-alongs, this sounds like a great place to go crawling around with cameras on their heads. They don’t find the mythical stone they were looking for, but they do find a tunnel into their own personal nightmares. The set-ting is grim and dark enough, but this found-footage flick will leave you more nauseous than spooked.

“Kids for Cash” (PG-13) — In Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, more than 3,000 children were incarcerated for minor mis-conduct, all while one judge raked in nearly $3 million in kickbacks from the companies running the detention centers. One girl was even sentenced to juvenile detention for mak-ing a fake MySpace account as a joke on her school’s assistant principal. Each kid who entered Mark Ciavarella’s courtroom was railroaded to the maximum pos-sible sentence, because every kid he locked up put money in his account. This documen-tary examines the scandal, the impact it’s had, and what it says about our justice system.

TV RELEASES“Justified: Season 5”“Broad City: Season 1”“The Simpsons: Season 17”Happy Days: Season 6”“Gunsmoke: Season 11 —

Volume One”“The Strain: Season 1”

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

Jason Clarke in “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes”

1. Two pitchers hold the Boston Red Sox record for most shutouts (38). One is Roger Clemens. Who is the other?

2. Name the manager who followed Sparky Anderson in Detroit.

3. When was the last time before the 2013 season that the Florida Gators football team did not play in a bowl game?

4. Name the season the Minnesota Timberwolves last made the NBA playoffs?

5. How many times have the New York Rangers reached the Stanley Cup Finals?

6. Name the last year before 2014 in which Ford driv-ers won four consecutive

NASCAR Cup races.7. When was the last time

before 2014 that no U.S. male or female tennis player reached the round of 16 in singles competition at Wimbledon?

1. Who had a hit with “Be Young, Be Foolish, Be Happy” in 1968? Hint: The group got their name from a hat.

2. In “Running Scared,” what

is the singer afraid of?3. Who released “Gypsys,

Tramps & Thieves”?4. Which artist released the

1978 hit “Shame”?5. Name the song that con-

tains this lyric: “Tell me does she kiss like I used to kiss you? Does it feel the same when she calls your name? Somewhere deep inside you must know I miss you, but what can I say, rules must be obeyed.”

This might be the year that you decide to spend a little (or a lot) more

on holiday gift giving. Maybe finances are looking a bit better after a long period of struggle. But before you break the bank, ask yourself a few questions:

Is your home paid for? Is your car paid for? Do you have ade-quate savings if you lose your job? Have you paid off all your credit cards and loans?

If the answer to any of these is no, then this isn’t the year to spend wildly on gifts.

Create a budget before you spend a single dollar. But before you create that budget, decide what’s really important to you.

For some, it’s a big holiday dinner with dozens of friends and relatives in attendance. If so, have everyone bring a dish,

but count on providing the majority of the meal yourself. Make your lists and start shop-ping the weekly grocery ads. Stock up when items go on sale. While not everything can be bought in advance, many things can be: canned goods, frozen foods and packaged mixes. Don’t forget the extras that always come with entertaining: carpet cleaning services, new linens if you’ll have out-of-town guests, a quick coat of paint

in the living room. Don’t get caught at the end with bigger expenses than you’d planned because you left something off the list.

If you have young children, chances are the sparkle in their eyes as they open gifts is most important to you. If they watch a lot of children’s TV shows, this is a good time to limit TV and keep them away from the ads. Look for timeless toys that require kid power, not batter-ies. Watch the ads for sales, and look for nearly new toys in charity shops.

If you typically swap gifts with adult members of the fam-ily at a distance, make this the year you stop. Get an agreement to cut back and no longer send gifts for the adults — they’ll probably be relieved.

If you have a computer spreadsheet program, it will help keep your expenses real-istic. Start with the cash you actually have to spend without using credit cards and without putting your other financial obligations in jeopardy. Make columns for budget and actual costs, and update the figures as you go along.

Make this a stress-free holi-day season by not overspend-ing.

• • •David Uffington regrets that

he cannot personally answer reader questions, but will incor-porate them into his column whenever possible. Send email to [email protected].

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

QUIZ AND TRIVIA ANSWERS BELOW

ANSWERSSports Quiz Answers 1. Cy Young.2. Buddy Bell, who managed the

Tigers for nearly three sea-sons (1996-98).

3. It was the 1990 season.4. It was the 2003-04 season.5. The Rangers have reached it

11 times, winning four.6. It was 2001, when Dale Jarrett

(three times) and Elliott Sadler won.

7. It was 1911.

Flash Back Trivia Answers1. The Tams. They got their

name from the hats they wore onstage, tam o’shanters.

2. He’s afraid of his girlfriend’s choice, should her old boy-friend come back.

3. Cher, in 1971. The original title was “Gypsys, Tramps and White Trash” until cooler heads prevailed.

4. Evelyn “Champagne” King. The song is on the “Grand Theft Auto: Vice City” video game.

5. “The Winner Takes It All,” by ABBA in 1980. The song, originally titled “The Story of My Life,” is thought to be about the divorce between two members of ABBA, Agnetha Faltskog and Bjorn Ulvaeus. However, Ulvaeus claims the song is fiction. It was a Top 10 song all over the world.

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

Super Crossword & Suduko Puzzle Answersfrom page C2

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Solution #2750-M

8 1 6 4 5 2 3 7 93 4 2 1 7 9 5 6 85 7 9 3 6 8 1 2 46 2 7 8 1 5 4 9 34 3 5 2 9 6 7 8 19 8 1 7 4 3 6 5 2

2 5 4 6 8 1 9 3 71 9 3 5 2 7 8 4 67 6 8 9 3 4 2 1 5

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Solution #2750-D

9 7 1 2 5 8 6 4 38 4 2 6 3 7 1 9 53 5 6 1 9 4 7 8 27 6 4 8 2 9 3 5 11 3 5 4 7 6 8 2 92 8 9 3 1 5 4 7 6

4 2 7 5 6 3 9 1 86 1 8 9 4 2 5 3 75 9 3 7 8 1 2 6 4

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Now hiring:

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This is an outstanding opportunity for safety conscious and engaged applicants with initiative, energy and solid communication skills. Responsibilities include operation and preventative maintenance of various industrial equipment (including mobile equipment, forklift, and conveyor systems), product loading and quality inspections, housekeeping, as well as other duties assigned.

EXCELLENT COMPENSATION & BENEFITS PACKAGE: Wage begins at $20.66 per hour. We offer a 401K plan; health, dental and vision insurance; paid vacation and holidays; wellness program; incentive plan and opportunities for growth.

REQUIREMENTS: Must be at least 18 years of age, have a High school diploma/GED, be available to work rotating shifts and overtime as needed--previous forklift certification and experience a plus. All candidates are subject to a 90 day probationary period. Must pass a company paid medical exam including a drug/alcohol screen, physical ability test, reference

and credit checks, and criminal background check.

HOW TO APPLY: Apply online at www.cargill.com/careers, select “Browse Cargill Jobs,” then click on “United States” and “Utah” to find the job opening. If you do not have access to the internet, please visit your local library or employment office. Cargill is an equal opportunity and affirmative action employer.

$21.07

Starting Salary: $20.31-$22.44 per hour DOQStatus: Full-time with Benefi tsClosing Date: November 26, 2014 @ 6:00 pm

Two Positions Available Alternative Funding Positions

The Opportunity:Performs complex public contact work designing and conducting community health education programs. Is responsible for the development and implementation of prevention-oriented public health education programs, including tobacco prevention education and cessation, intentional and unintentional injury prevention, physical activity, nutrition and obesity, chronic disease prevention, and environmental health education programs.

Tobacco Prevention Cessation• Prevention Education: Provide Smoking Cessation programs in schools and the community using current cession methodologies. Conduct and Monitor Under-age Buying Operations: In cooperation with local law enforcement agencies, conduct underage buying operations to identify and educate retailers who sell tobacco products to under-age persons.

Chronic Disease Prevention• Prevention Education: Nutrition, physical activity, self-esteem, injury prevention, health screenings and early detection of health problems, physical activity, nutrition and obesity, and other community/person-al health issues. Injury Prevention: Develop and implement health education programs to reduce the incidence of intentional and unintentional injuries; e.g., bicycle injuries, motor vehicle crash, burns, poisoning, suicide, and violence.

Minimum Qualifi cations• Education and Experience• Graduation from college or university with a Bach-elor’s degree, major in Public Health Education, Com-munity Health Education, Nursing, Public Health, Life Styles Management or a closely related fi eld.

• Experience: Two (2) years professional health educa-tion experience.

Required Knowledge, Skills & Abilities:

Considerable knowledge and understanding of public health methods and procedures; Skills in delivering presentations to individuals and groups; Ability to develop curriculum, lesson plans, skill building activities, audio-visual materials and other motivational and educa-tional materials; Must be a non-smoker and non-tobacco user. Must be able to carry audio-visual equipment and educational materials. Must have a valid Utah Driver’s License and a good driving record. Must be available for periodic evening and weekend presentations and activities and occasional overnight travel.

HEALTH EDUCATOR

For a more complete job description or an on-line application please visit

http://www.co.tooele.ut.us/hr.htmlApplications must be submitted to

Tooele County Human Resource Offi ce, Rm 308 47 South Main Street, Tooele

Or email application and resume to [email protected]

EEO Employer

We’re a $5-billion growth company, and one of the nation’s fastest growing retail organizations.

Can you imagine a more exciting place to grow?

New store opening in Stansbury Park, UT

Assistant ManagerTeam Leaders

Team MembersReceivers

Apply online at: www.tractorsupply.jobs

Horse owners, farmers/ranchers and welders are encouraged to apply. Qualifying applicants will be

contacted for scheduled interviews.

© 2014 NAS(Media: delete copyright notice)

Tooele Transcript Bulletin2.60" x 5"B&W

EOE

YOU’LL GET A KICK OUT OF WORKING OUT HERE.

WORK HARD. HAVE FUN. MAKE MONEY.

JOB OPENING NOTICE FOR GRANTSVILLE CITY

This is a full time position with benefits. Must possess a valid driver’s license. Background check and drug

test is required. Individual will perform unskilled and semi-skilled tasks involved in general Public Works

maintenance and ground care. Applicant must have a High School diploma or equivalent, be familiar with and

able to operate hand and power tools which includes operating lawn care equipment. Some experience

with heavy equipment is desirable. Must be willing to work outdoors throughout the year and be able to

withstand weather extremes. Applicant will be required to be available for “on call” duty. Position will require

stooping, kneeling and heavy lifting. Starting pay for this position is between $12.00-$14.00 per hour

depending on experience.

Applications can be found at www.grantsvilleut.gov or obtained at Grantsville City Hall at

429 East Main Street. A resume and references are to be included with the application. Applications are to be

submitted to Susan Gustin at Grantsville City Hall no later than December 1, 2014 at 4:00 p.m.

GRANTSVILLE CITY IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

LABORER

A House SOLD Name!

435 850.8167

8 COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES AVAILABLE IN COUNTY CALL FOR DETAILS!

[email protected]

Andrea Cahoon

www.acre411.com

THE MARKET IS MY LISTINGS NEAR GONE…

Give me a call if YOU want to MOVE on!

$125,000Well kept by one owner for 56 years! 2 bedroom 1 ½ bath home with 2 large family rooms and a main fl oor laundry. Beautifully landscaped, 2 sheds, and it even has a white picket fence!

165 N 100 EastTooele

$169,000 4 bdrm 3 bath all remodeled condo w/granite counter tops, new carpet, paint, bathrooms & kitchen. Let someone else do the maintenance! Community includes a clubhouse & pool.

8 Benchmark VillageTooele

$179,900 All brick rambler with 3,032 sq ft, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths & a main fl oor laundry. Storage building with room for four cars. Covered patio & many upgrades. RV parking & a fenced yard.

388 Date StreetTooele

$72,9002 bedroom 2 bath home with an attached 2 car garage. New paint and carpet. Storage shed and covered patio. Lots of potential! Cash only.

724 Fleetwood DriveTooele

$199,900 4 bdrm 3 bath home on a large 0.30 acre lot w/views all around! Great SE location with lots of RV parking. Fenced yard and very clean!

418 S. 800 EastTooele

$72,9002 bedroom 2 bath home with an attached 2 car garage. New paint and carpet. Storage shed and covered patio. Lots of potential! Cash only.

724 Fleetwood DriveTooeleUnder

Contract!

801.520.6680

on becoming Associate Broker

at Coldwell Banker

Carol AutryCongratulations!

Services

HANSON & SONSHandyman Home re-pairs, finish basements,siding, roofing, plumb-ing, electrical, decks,tile. Very Reasonable.Local Tooele. Jeff(435)775-1445

ALTERATIONSand AWARD WINNING

TAILORINGby

KATHY JONES

882-6605ELECTRICIAN/ HANDY-MAN residential/ com-mercial electrical in-stalls & repairs, remod-eling, painting, plumb-ing! Dale 435-843-7693801-865-1878 L i -censed, insured.! Majorcredit cards accepted!

HAVING A yard sale?Advertise in the Tran-script

Services

HANDYMAN. Tree trim-ming, sprinklers, yardwork. Snow Removal.Residential and busi-ness. Call Jimmy at(435)224-4502

HOME CLEAN Home isrunning a holiday clean-ing special. Book early.Limited space avail-able. Call now, ask forLori (435)882-1748

HOME REPAIRS expert.Door knobs, base-boards, mouldings, dry-wall repairs, textures,caulking, weatherproof-ing, framing, home up-dating and renovationsand much more.Smalljobs okay. Call Shane(435)840-0344

PRIVATE TUTORING.I am a certifiedteacher with 20yrs ex-perience. All ages/subjects. Call Angelafor free assessment(435)882-2733(435)496-0590

RAIN GUTTERS, seam-less, aluminum, all col-ors, licensed and in-sured, free estimates.(435)841-4001

Services

SANTA Now taking ap-pointments for all yourHoliday needs! 12yrsexperience. Book be-fore Santa!s stops areall full! (435)775-1385Chris.

TREE WORK. Free esti-mates! Local company.Licensed & insured.Bucket truck, Craneservice, Stump re-moval, mulch. 801-633-6685 PreciseYard.com

VOICE LESSONS. Allages. No experiencerequired. Learn propertechniques, will workwith all styles of sing-ing. (435)850-0590

Miscellaneous

4 HORSE Walker $500;Bobtail dump 454 en-gine (needs head), newtires. 1371 E Bryan Rd,(435)830-7645

CHRISTMAS Extrava-ganza hosted by NewLife Christian Fellow-ship. 12/11/14. EaglesNest, building 1005,Tooele Army Depot,3-8pm. Holiday shop-ping, food, entertain-ment, Santa, muchmore!

Miscellaneous

DIAMONDS don't payretail! Large selection,high quality. Bridal sets,wedding bands. Every-thing wholesale! RockyMtn. Diamond Co.S.L.C. 1-800-396-6948

Miscellaneous

DO YOU Love Pam-pered Chef? Are youcurious about Pam-pered Chef? Inter-ested in attending aPampered Chef cook-ing show? Would youlike to host a cooking,catalog or Facebookshow? Would you likea career or to earnextra income as aPampered Chef con-sultant? Contact meat (435)830-8784or chefamy@

fullhappiness.com orvisit my website atwww.pamperedchef.biz/afeinauer

F I R E P L A C E A N DStoves. Pellet, woodand gas. Out they go.Rebates up to $1000.We install. 30yrs inbusiness.(801)295-7398 or(801)598-3473

HANDICAPPED Motor-ized cart plus walker,call for price; Fridge$150; color TV w/stand$125 . Ca l l J im(435)840-1494 orTeresa (435)849-2237

SANTA !S SECRETShop, December 8-13at Taco Time. Vendorsneeded. Call Sherry(435)496-0313

SELL YOUR computer inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 or visi twww.tooeletranscript.com

TUPPERWARE. ToCheck on ChristmasSpecials Call Sherry at(435)496-0313

YARDMACHINE RID-ING lawn mower, 38twinblade, needs work,$250 OBO. Call or text(801)330-8155 after6pm.

Furniture & Appliances

32” Frigidaire refrigera-t o r / f r e e z e r ,side-by-side, ice maker,spotless, white. $350801-205-3883

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

Furniture & Appliances

NORTH VALLEY Appli-ance. Washers/ dryersrefrigerators, freezers,stoves, dishwashers.$149-$399. Completerepair service. Satis-faction guaranteed.Parts for all brands. Giftcards w/purchases over$199. (435)830-3225.(435)843-9154

Garage, Yard Sales

HAVING A GARAGE

SALE? Advertise it in

the classifieds. Call

882-0050

TOOELE, 495 W 200 S,Saturday, 8am-noon.Moving sale. Furniture,washer, dryer. Every-thing must go!

Pets

Pampered Pet ResortQuality pet care for

over 30 years.Dog & Cat boarding

435-884-3374pamperedpetresort.com

ADORABLE Orange andwhite fluffy kittens needa home. Please call(435)882-2667

RUSH LAKE

KENNELS.Dog & Cat boarding,

obedience training.Call (435)882-5266

rushlakekennels.com

Livestock

QUALITY ALFALFAHAY, 110 bales, approx110-120lbs each. $12/bale or take all for$ 1 2 5 0 . C a l l(435)837-2246 forpickup times.

STRAW bales. Newcrop. $5/ bale you pickup. $7/bale Delivered.Garth (435)837-2246(435)830-2309

Sporting Goods

SELLING YOUR moun-tain bike? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 www.tooeletranscript.com

Help Wanted

BARTENDER. Apply atWorkforce Services.Moose Lodge. ClosesFriday, November 21.

Drivers:! SIGN-ON BO-NUS!! Home EveryNight, $500 @ 90 days.$500 @ 6 months.! De-liver/ set up containers.!C D L r e q " d .801-359-4220

EXPERIENCED MeatCutter. Apply in person.Hunsaker Meats 580 N1000 W. (435)882-4882

NITRO FUNNY Car: In-ternship available 2015.Team based in Tooelevalley. Need strong in-terest in high perform-ance motor sports,healthy, non-smoker,drug-free. Send letter ofinterest to: [email protected]

Help Wanted

FACTORY LABOR.Temporary employmentavailable through Janu-ary. These are FactoryLabor/ Production posi-tions. We will train. Weare located on the UtahIndustrial Depot. $9/hr,7:45am-4:15pm. Over-time available. 20 posi-tions available. Applyin person and readyto work. No phonecalls please. MidwestCanvas, 230 SouthGarnet, Tooele, UT.EOE.

FILM, Commercial, TV,Fashion. Flex sched-ules & great pay. Allages and experiencelevels.! 801-438-0067

FRAMERS WANTED.Experience preferred.Pay negotiable, canstart immediately! CallMike (801)230-7986

LOOKING FOR or willingto train ambitious reli-able individual inter-ested in learning autobody and refinish tradefor busy body shop inSLC area. Must havetransportation.(801)972-2224

MEAT WRAPPER. Ap-ply in person. Lifting re-quired Hunsaker Meats580 N 1000 W Tooele.(435)882-4882

NOW HIRING: TooeleArmy Depot MWR hasan opening for a Rec-reation Aid, NF-01.The starting wage is$8.25 to $10.50 perhour. This is an inter-mittent position; noguaranteed hours andno benefits. Openingdate is Nov 19, 2014,closing date is Nov 25,2014. For instructionson how to apply go towww.usajobs.gov. Formore information call833-2005.

NOW HIRING: TooeleArmy Depot MWR hasan opening for aWaiter, NA-03. Thestarting wage is $9.75to $11.46 per hour.This is an intermittentposition; no guaranteedhours and no benefits.Opening date is Nov19, 2014, closing dateis Nov 25, 2014. Forinstructions on how toapply go to www.usa-jobs.gov. For more in-f o r m a t i o n c a l l833-2005.

VALLEY BEHAVIORALHealth- Tooele is seek-ing a PT Food BankWorker/ Driver. M-F;5-1. For full details/ap-ply: www.valleycares.com. “careers” tab.

WANTED: ExperiencedClothes Presser. Applyin person at Nu Clean-ers. 53 E Vine.

Wanted

I AM paying more foryour junk cars andtrucks. I will come toyou and tow it away.Call/Text (435)224-2064

DEADLINES FOR clas-sifieds ads are Mondayand Wednesdays by4:45 p.m.

Wanted

WANTED: Scrap metal.Appliances, lawn mow-ers, garbage disposals,etc. Will pick up free.C a l l R i c k a t(801)599-5634

Recreational Vehicles

1976 SkiDoo trail sled,engine tuned, runsgreat, cargo box.! $250801-205-3883

Autos

SELL YOUR CAR orboat in the classifieds.Call 882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

Rooms for Rent

1-2 BDRM, 1bth Stans-bury Park Home. Fur-nished. $400/mo utili-ties paid. Kitchen avail-able. Clean, no smok-ing/ alcohol, no pets.Mature, responsible.Internet, cable avail-able. (801)608-2494ask for Pam for ap-pointment.

Apartments for Rent

2BDRM 1bth, quiet. Nopets, no smoking, 1yrlease, air, w/d hookups,storage shed, carport,water, sewer, garbageincluded. For further in-formation please call(435)882-4986

2BDRM 1BTH, remod-eled, govt. subsidized.Playground, carport,free cable. $500/dep.211 S. Hale, Grants-v i l le . Cal l Chr is(435)843-8247 EqualHousing Opp.

BACHELOR APT. Singlebasement apartment,1bdrm, new bath, utili-ties except gas, outsideentrance, one parkingspace. No smoking, nopets. $650/mo plus de-posit and references.(435)830-0793

DUPLEX, TOOELE,2bdrm, 1bth, $700/mo,$700/dep, 477 N Delta,Aaron (801)450-8432www.aaronoakeson.com

LARGE 2BDRM 1.5bth,w/d hookups, garbagedisposal, storage shed,private patio, coveredparking. No smoking.No pets. $650/mo,$500/dep.(435)241-9118

THURSDAY November 20, 2014 C5

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

435-840-0344

For any of your real estate needs, call Shane Bergen

MAIN HOME:• 5 Bdrms, 4 Baths • Quality, Comfort!•Artesian Well • 5.61 ac., 2 Water Shares

RUSH VALLEY W/ 2ND HOME

& LAND!$499,900

794 E VINE STTOOELE

$193,900•Adjacent to Oquirrh Hills Golf Course• Fully Fenced• 3 Bdrms, 3 Bath• Lg. Covered Patio • Storage Galore

$99,700• 2 Bedrooms• 2 Baths• Open Loft • Great Location!• Motivated Seller!

New Listing!

SECOND HOME: 2 Bdrm, 2 Bath Rambler, Great shape, Options

2 Homes!

Price Reduced!

4 MILLPONDSTANSBURY

CONDO

FOR SALE

123 VAL VISTA DR • TOOELE

[email protected]

SHERRI NELSON 435.840.5167

Sat • November 22 • 10am - 1pm

This custom built, single owner home is gorgeous with upgrades everywhere. 5 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms completely fi nished up and down. New paint in basement family/game/kitchen area. Come take a look. You will fall in love with your new home!

REDUCED $25,000 — SELLER MOTIVATED!

Open House

Sandra Larsen REAL ESTATE

435.224.9186For All Your Real Estate Needs!

78 BOOTH • GRANTSVILLE

ONLY $193,000Darling rambler!! Central air. Main fl oor laundry. 5 bdrms,

2 baths. Laminate & tile fl ooring. Lots of decorative woodwork (crown molding, bead board etc) LARGE kitchen island and lots of cabinets and counter space.

1113 S 1050 WEST • TOOELE

ONLY $208,000Still time to pick colors! Stucco, stone, carpet,

tile,cabinets, paint, fi xtures! Taxes unkown. Great fl oor plan. 120 sq ft cold storage. Garden tub in master/tile

surround.LOTS ofUPGRADES!

Service with a Smile!

61 QUEBEC CIR • TOOELE

ONLY $140,000Great cul-de-sac location at an amazing

price!! Secluded back yard with lots of mature trees for privacy. Large trex

deck. Lots of R.V. Parking.

1113 S 1050 WEST • TOOELE

ONLY ONLY ONLY $208,000208,000$208,000$

Still time to pick colors! Stucco, stone, carpet, tile,cabinets, paint, fi xtures! Taxes unkown. Great fl oor plan. 120 sq ft cold storage. Garden tub in master/tile

surround.LOTS ofUPGRADES!

SOLD—More NewBuilds to

Come!

LAND693 E OAKRIDGE DR $87,000. Beautiful lot on East bench!

4000 N SR 36 Corner of SR36 & Erda Way. Apx. 35.11 acres of vacant land w/9.66 acres zoned CG (Commercial) & the remaining acrege of 25.45 acres is zoned RR-5. (Residen-tial on 5 acre lots.)

408 N 250 W $45,000. 1.25 ac in Tooele City!

260 W 400 N $40,000. Corner Lot.

300 W 400 N 1.25 ac on corner lot, Tooele City

2947 W RUIZ Prime building lot! Stockton. $64,900

1048 N DOUGLAS LN Beautiful 5+ acre piece in Vernon Utah. $67,410

449 HAVASU ST • TOOELE

ONLY $165,000Updated kitchen, newer appliances, tile fl oor.

Bathrooms have been remodeled.Woodburning fi replace upstairs with blower. Gas fi replace in

basement. HOT TUB AND GAZEBO INCLUDED!!

305 S 2ND ST • TOOELE

ONLY $150,000New counter tops, new kitchen sink, New bathroom

vanities. Newer vinyl windows. Membrane roof, soffi t & facia are only 3 yrs old. New water heater. Huge backyard- covered patio, large playset, fully fenced.

$150,000

UnderContract

1235 E 940 N • TOOELE

ONLY $169,000Well taken care of. CLEAN! Full master bath. Recently

fi nished basement has, large bedroom, family room & nice bathroom w/large tiled shower. Located in a nice cul-de-

sac in North East Tooele.Close to elementary school.

169,000169,000

UnderContract

Room for your extended family or Mother-In-Law while still maintaining your privacy!

855 East 750 North; Tooele…. $ 235,000

Upstairs Includes: Approx. 1,700 Sq. Ft.; 3 Bedroom; 2 Full Bath; 1-1/2 Bath; Kitchen; Laundry; Family Room & Living Room. Basement Includes: Approx. 1,700 Sq. Ft.; Walk-Out Basement with Separate Drive; 2 Bedroom; 1-3/4 Bath; Full Kitchen; Office (can be 3rd bedroom if closet added); Laundry; Family Room; Storage **Central Vac.; Plantation Shutters; Furnace - 1 Year Old; RV Parking; Large Storage Shed in Back Yard To House Your ATV’s.** **CALL TODAY FOR YOUR PRIVATE SHOWING**

TERESA TURNER, OWNER/AGENT – (435)830-6688

Real Estate

Open House

2700 sq. ft., fully finished, beautifully landscaped & fully fenced, 4 bedrooms,

2.5 baths, gourmet kitchen, many extra’s. MLS#1264811.

$269,900

Ila Sprouse 435.224.2737

Sat • November 22 • 1-3pm

448 W Broome St. • Stansbury

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

2 AND 3bdrm apartments behind Super Wal-Mart. Swimming pool,

hot tub, exercise room, playground, full clubhouse.

Tooele Gateway Apartments (435)843-4400

Tooele Gateway Apartments

Apartments for Rent

NICE APARTMENT 28South 6th Street,Tooele, 2bdrm By EastElementary. Four-plexbuilding w/on-site laun-dry. Water, sewer, gar-b a g e i n c l u d e d .$675/mo $400/dep.(801)792-8412

PRIVATE BEDROOM.Free wifi, satellite TV,refrigerator, microwave,bed. Shared kitchen/bath, w/d. No pets. Utili-ties paid. $385/mo$400/dep435-882-6141

Apartments for Rent

SETTLEMENT CAN-YON APARTMENTS 2& 3 bedroom apts.Prices start ing at$840/mo. Call Danielle(435)882-6112 for info.

STOCKTON, 2BDRMBasement. $735/mo in-cludes utilities, w/dhookups. Call after6:30pm. (435)841-1533

TOOELE 1BDRM Base-ment apt, utilities in-cluded, w/d hookups,$700/mo, no smoking,no pets. For more infocall (435)830-0295

SELL YOUR car in theTranscript Bulletin Clas-sified section.

Apartments for Rent

TOOELE, Secluded1bdrm home. $600/mo.No smoking, no pets.(801)860-7677 Owner/Agent

Homes for Rent

$475/MO TOOELE2 b d r m . C a l l(435)850-0476

WHY RENT When YouCan Buy? Zero down& Low Income pro-grams, 1st time & Sin-gle parent programs,Berna Sloan (435)840-5029 Group 1

2250SQFT Rambler forrent $1200/mo, 4bdrm,3bth, 2 car garage,large yard fully fenced,NE Tooele. $700/dep.No pets, no smoking,no drinking. Glen840-3399

2BDRM, 1BTH fencedyard, dishwasher, fire-place, shed, $775/mo,$700/dep, 1yr lease.Pets extra. 159 N 5thSt. (435)882-8407

3BDRM 1BTH Spaciousduplex w/basement,w/d hookups, carport,storage. Must see! Nosmoking. Pets wel-c o m e . $ 8 0 0 / m o435-830-6994

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

Homes for Rent

3BDRM 2BTH, horseproperty, Rush Valley,40 acres, includesshop/ garage, horsecorrals, new carpet,paint , very nice.$1500/mo. Call formore info. Marci(435)840-0208

CLEAN 1488SQFT largerooms, walk-in closetmaster bedroom, appli-ances, utilities included.Ca l l DP Rea l ty(435)830-2233

EXCELLENT CONDI-T ION S ing lew ide2bdrm, 1bth only$550/mo w/option tobuy. Grantsville Village,653 E Main Call any-t i m e . A l e x(435)224-4804

FREE RENT! Caretakerfor Ranch in Skull Val-ley. Perfect for Dugwayemployees, solitudes e e k e r s . C a l l(801)808-1667 Inter-view, deposit required.

HOMES available to pur-chase for LOW IN-COME buyers withgood credit.! BernaSloan (435)840-5029Group 1 Real Estate.

OVERLAKE/ TooeleLarge 5bdrm, 3bth

rambler, 2 car garage,finished basement

New carpet/ paint. $1195No pets, no smoking336 Candellaria Dr

(1480 North)Davidson Realty

(801)466-5078www.dripm.com

STANBSURY PARK,3bdrm 2bth multi level,2 car garage, central

ac, family room,unfinished basement,

$1095/mo.190 Crystal Bay(Reflection Bay)

Davidson Realty(801)466-5078www.dripm.com

STANSBURY PARK on

the lake, 6bdrm 3bthrambler, 3-car garage,$1700/mo. Lease op-t i o n a v a i l a b l e .(801)842-9631 Guar-dright Property Man-agement/Equity RE.

TOOELE, 1bdrm 1bthcottage, new paint/

carpet. No pets,no smoking. $550/mo

136 N 4th St RearDavidson Realty

(801)466-5078www.dripm.com

TOOELE/ OVERLAKE5bdrm, 3bth, 2 story

2 car garage, central acfenced, $1195/mo.17 East Aaron Drive

(1640 North)Davidson Realty

(801)466-5078www.dripm.com

Homes

$$SAVE MONEYSearch Bank & HUDhomes www.TooeleBankHomes.comBerna Sloan (435)840-5029 Group 1

S E L L I N G Y O U RHOME? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

Homes

TOOELE, Beautiful ram-bler, quiet neighbor-hood, close to school,golf course and park,fenced yard, finishedbasement. Shown byappointment.(435)840-2034

Mobile Homes

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

RENT TO OWN 2bdrm2bth/1bth quiet parknear lake. Starting$495/mo Space rent/fishing boat included.144 W Durfee Grants-ville (801)651-5151

Water Shares

FOR SALE: 1.5 sharesMiddle Canyon Irriga-tion. Asking price$4500. Please call Jen-nifer at (360)434-6999

Public Notices Meetings

Deadline for public no-tices is 4 p.m. the dayprior to publication.Public notices submit-ted past the deadlinewill not be accepted.UPAXLP

GRANTSVILLE CITYNOTICE OF PUBLICHEARING NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that the Grants-ville City Council willconduct the followingpublic hearing at theGrantsville City Offices,429 East Main Street,Grantsville, Utah at 7:00p.m. on Wednesday, De-cember 3, 2014 to re-ceive public input re-garding the following:Proposed minor subdivi-sion for Louise C. Zabeldividing 0.69 acres ofland from one (1) lot intotwo (2) lots at 250 WestCherry Street in a RM-7zone.All interested personsare invited to attend andprovide comment uponthis proposal. Writtencomments will also beconsidered if submittedto the City Recorder inadvance of the hearing.A copy of the annexationpetition may be reviewedat the Grantsville CityOffices each weekdaybefore the public hear-ing, between the hoursof 9:00 a.m. and 5:00p.m.Persons with disabilitiesneeding accommoda-tions to participate inthese hearings shouldcontact Christine Webb(435.884.3411) at theGrantsville City Officesat least 24 hours in ad-vance of the hearings.DATED this 19th day ofNovember, 2014.Christine WebbGrantsville CityRecorder(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November20, 2014)

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that the Stans-bury Park ImprovementDistrict will hold its 2015Budget Hearing on De-cember 2, 2014 at 6:00p.m. at the StansburyPark Office, 30 Plaza.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November20 & 25, 2014)

S E L L I N G Y O U RHOME? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 or visi twww.tooeletranscript.com

Public Notices Meetings

LEPC AGENDAAgenda for the LEPCmeeting to be heldWednesday, Nov 26,2014 at 1:30 p.m. at theTooele County Emer-gency ManagementBuilding, 15 East 100South, Tooele, Utah, inthe Emergency Opera-tions Training room.1. Welcome- Chairman,LEPC2. Approve October min-utes3. Haz Mat reports-Bucky Whitehouse4. Review upcomingtraining5. DEM Liaison, Emer-gency Services6. Roundtable7. Next meeting- TBD8. AdjournBucky WhitehouseLEPC Chairman(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November20 & 25, 2014)

NOTICE AND AGENDANOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN THAT THETOOELE COUNTYBOARD OF HEALTHWILL HOLD A REGU-LAR MEETING ONTUESDAY NOVEMBER25, 2014, AT 7:00 P.M.,151 NORTH MAINSTREET, SUITE 280,TOOELE, UTAH1. Welcome, Approve9/30/14 Minutes2. Health Officer's Re-port3. Family & School Nurs-ing Update4. Aging's Meals OnWheels Survey5. Environmental HealthUpdate6. Community ServicesUpdate7. TCHD Employee Im-munization Regulation8. Board Member Ap-pointments9. Board of Health 2015Meeting Schedule10. Board Member Com-ments/ Concerns11. Adjourn12. Executive SessionMYRON BATEMAN,Health OfficerIf you desire special ac-commodation under theAmericans With Disabili-ties Act, please contactTooele County's ADACoord ina to r , JamiMcCart, (435) 843-3157,within three workingdays prior to this meet-ing.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November20 & 25, 2014)

PUBLIC NOTICETOWN OF RUSH VAL-LEY TOWN COUNCILPlease take notice thatthe regular meeting ofthe Rush Valley TownCouncil scheduled forNovember 26, 2014 at7:00 p.m., has been can-celled due to no agendaitems.DATED this 19th day ofNovember, 2014Amie RussellRush Valley TownClerk/ RecorderTown Website: www.rushvalleytown.com(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November20, 2014)

Public Notices Trustees

Deadline for public no-tices is 4 p.m. the dayprior to publication.Public notices submit-ted past the deadlinewill not be accepted.UPAXLP

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following describedreal property will be soldat public auction to thehighest bidder, purchaseprice payable in lawfulmoney of the UnitedStates of America at thetime of sale, at the mainentrance of the TooeleCounty Courthouse,a/k/a the Third JudicialDistrict Court, 74 South100 East, Tooele, Utah,on Monday, December15, 2014, at the hour of9:30 a.m. of that day forthe purpose of foreclos-ing a deed of trust origi-nally executed by RustyH. Jones, in favor ofTooele Federal CreditUnion, covering realproperty located at ap-proximately 734 VanDyke Way, Tooele,Tooele County, Utah,and more particularly de-scribed as:LOT 57, WESTLANDMOBILE ESTATES NO.1 SUBDIVISION, ASUBDIV IS ION OFTOOELE CITY, AC-CORDING TO THE OF-F I C I A L P L A TTHEREOF, RECORDEDIN THE OFFICE OFTHE COUNTY RE-CORDER OF TOOELEC O U N T Y , U T A H .10-045-0-0057The current beneficiaryof the trust deed is Heri-tageWest Credit Union(formerly known asTooele Federal CreditUnion) a division ofChartway Federal CreditUnion, and the recordowner of the property asof the recording of thenotice of default is RustyH. Jones. The trustee'ssale of the aforede-scribed real property willbe made without war-ranty as to title, posses-sion, or encumbrances.Bidders must be pre-pared to tender a cash-ier's check in the amountof $20,000.00 at thesale. The balance of thepurchase price must bepaid by cashier's checkor wire transfer receivedby 12:00 noon the fol-lowing business day.The trustee reserves theright to void the effect ofthe trustee's sale afterthe sale based upon in-formation unknown tothe trustee at the time ofthe sale, such as a bank-ruptcy filing, a loan rein-statement, or an agree-ment between the trustorand beneficiary to post-pone or cancel the sale.If so voided, the only re-course of the highestbidder is to receive a fullrefund of the money paidto the trustee. THIS ISAN ATTEMPT TO COL-LECT A DEBT. ANY IN-FORMATION OB-TAINED WILL BE USEDFOR THAT PURPOSE.DATED this 12th day ofNovember, 2014Marlon L. Bates, suc-cessor trusteeScalley Reading BatesHansen & Rasmussen,P.C.15 West South Temple,Ste. 600Salt Lake City, Utah84101Telephone: (801) 531-7870Business Hours: 9:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Trustee No. 44081-142(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November13, 20 & 27, 2014)

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following describedreal property will be soldat public auction to thehighest bidder, purchaseprice payable in lawfulmoney of the UnitedStates of America at thetime of sale, at the mainentrance of the TooeleCounty Courthouse,a/k/a the Third JudicialDistrict Court, 74 South100 East, Tooele, Utah,on Monday, December15, 2014, at the hour of9:30 a.m. of that day forthe purpose of foreclos-ing a deed of trust origi-nally executed by RustyH. Jones, in favor ofTooele Federal CreditUnion, covering realproperty located at ap-proximately 734 VanDyke Way, Tooele,Tooele County, Utah,and more particularly de-scribed as:LOT 57, WESTLANDMOBILE ESTATES NO.1 SUBDIVISION, ASUBDIV IS ION OFTOOELE CITY, AC-CORDING TO THE OF-F I C I A L P L A TTHEREOF, RECORDEDIN THE OFFICE OFTHE COUNTY RE-CORDER OF TOOELEC O U N T Y , U T A H .10-045-0-0057The current beneficiaryof the trust deed is Heri-tageWest Credit Union(formerly known asTooele Federal CreditUnion) a division ofChartway Federal CreditUnion, and the recordowner of the property asof the recording of thenotice of default is RustyH. Jones. The trustee'ssale of the aforede-scribed real property willbe made without war-ranty as to title, posses-sion, or encumbrances.Bidders must be pre-pared to tender a cash-ier's check in the amountof $20,000.00 at thesale. The balance of thepurchase price must bepaid by cashier's checkor wire transfer receivedby 12:00 noon the fol-lowing business day.The trustee reserves theright to void the effect ofthe trustee's sale afterthe sale based upon in-formation unknown tothe trustee at the time ofthe sale, such as a bank-ruptcy filing, a loan rein-statement, or an agree-ment between the trustorand beneficiary to post-pone or cancel the sale.If so voided, the only re-course of the highestbidder is to receive a fullrefund of the money paidto the trustee. THIS ISAN ATTEMPT TO COL-LECT A DEBT. ANY IN-FORMATION OB-TAINED WILL BE USEDFOR THAT PURPOSE.DATED this 12th day ofNovember, 2014Marlon L. Bates, suc-cessor trusteeScalley Reading BatesHansen & Rasmussen,P.C.15 West South Temple,Ste. 600Salt Lake City, Utah84101Telephone: (801) 531-7870Business Hours: 9:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Trustee No. 44081-142(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November13, 20 & 27, 2014)

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following describedreal property will be soldat public auction to thehighest bidder, purchaseprice payable in lawfulmoney of the UnitedStates of America at thetime of sale, at the mainentrance of the TooeleCounty Courthouse,a/k/a the Third JudicialDistrict Court, 74 South100 East, Tooele, Utah,on Monday, December15, 2014, at the hour of9:30 a.m. of that day forthe purpose of foreclos-ing a deed of trust origi-nally executed by RustyH. Jones, in favor ofTooele Federal CreditUnion, covering realproperty located at ap-proximately 734 VanDyke Way, Tooele,Tooele County, Utah,and more particularly de-scribed as:LOT 57, WESTLANDMOBILE ESTATES NO.1 SUBDIVISION, ASUBDIV IS ION OFTOOELE CITY, AC-CORDING TO THE OF-F I C I A L P L A TTHEREOF, RECORDEDIN THE OFFICE OFTHE COUNTY RE-CORDER OF TOOELEC O U N T Y , U T A H .10-045-0-0057The current beneficiaryof the trust deed is Heri-tageWest Credit Union(formerly known asTooele Federal CreditUnion) a division ofChartway Federal CreditUnion, and the recordowner of the property asof the recording of thenotice of default is RustyH. Jones. The trustee'ssale of the aforede-scribed real property willbe made without war-ranty as to title, posses-sion, or encumbrances.Bidders must be pre-pared to tender a cash-ier's check in the amountof $20,000.00 at thesale. The balance of thepurchase price must bepaid by cashier's checkor wire transfer receivedby 12:00 noon the fol-lowing business day.The trustee reserves theright to void the effect ofthe trustee's sale afterthe sale based upon in-formation unknown tothe trustee at the time ofthe sale, such as a bank-ruptcy filing, a loan rein-statement, or an agree-ment between the trustorand beneficiary to post-pone or cancel the sale.If so voided, the only re-course of the highestbidder is to receive a fullrefund of the money paidto the trustee. THIS ISAN ATTEMPT TO COL-LECT A DEBT. ANY IN-FORMATION OB-TAINED WILL BE USEDFOR THAT PURPOSE.DATED this 12th day ofNovember, 2014Marlon L. Bates, suc-cessor trusteeScalley Reading BatesHansen & Rasmussen,P.C.15 West South Temple,Ste. 600Salt Lake City, Utah84101Telephone: (801) 531-7870Business Hours: 9:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Trustee No. 44081-142(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November13, 20 & 27, 2014)

Public Notices Water User

Deadline for public no-tices is 4 p.m. the dayprior to publication.Public notices submit-ted past the deadlinewill not be accepted.UPAXLP

Public Notices Miscellaneous

Deadline for public no-tices is 4 p.m. the dayprior to publication.Public notices submit-ted past the deadlinewill not be accepted.UPAXLP

NOTICE OF AUCTIONDate of Sale: Saturday,December 6, 2014.Time: 11:00 AM.Stansbury Park Stor-age, 7441 N Hwy 36,Lakepoint, UT.435-882-8648This notice of auction isbeing given pursuant to38-8-1 et al, Utah CodeAnnotated.UNIT 172/173 AdeleConnell. Furniture, golfclubs, kitchen cabinets,misc household, boxes &totes.UNIT 042 Edwin H. Pe-terson. Wood chipper,filing cabinets, floorprinter.UNIT 041 Jessie L.White. High lift jacks,engine lift, tools, furni-ture, misc items.UNIT 075 MichaelChism. Chain saws, jig-saw, 3 army tents, golfclubs, misc. items &boxes.UNIT 004 William Hilde-brand. Misc. items,boxes.UNIT 095. AaronHutchinson. Washer/dryer, bedroom set,kitchen appliances, misc.items & boxes.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November20, 2014)

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Public Notices Miscellaneous

NOTICE OF AUCTIONDate of Sale: Saturday,December 6, 2014.Time: 11:00 AM.Stansbury Park Stor-age, 7441 N Hwy 36,Lakepoint, UT.435-882-8648This notice of auction isbeing given pursuant to38-8-1 et al, Utah CodeAnnotated.UNIT 172/173 AdeleConnell. Furniture, golfclubs, kitchen cabinets,misc household, boxes &totes.UNIT 042 Edwin H. Pe-terson. Wood chipper,filing cabinets, floorprinter.UNIT 041 Jessie L.White. High lift jacks,engine lift, tools, furni-ture, misc items.UNIT 075 MichaelChism. Chain saws, jig-saw, 3 army tents, golfclubs, misc. items &boxes.UNIT 004 William Hilde-brand. Misc. items,boxes.UNIT 095. AaronHutchinson. Washer/dryer, bedroom set,kitchen appliances, misc.items & boxes.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November20, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

PUBLIC NOTICE

Depot Self Storage, lo-cated at 1685 W. JamesWay, Tooele, UT, 84074,hereby gives Lionel Mi-chael Masse, last knownaddress P.O. Box18501, Kearns, UT84118 notice that we areasserting a possessorylien on the propertystored in unit #841. Thelien is asserted for un-paid rental charges, latefees, and other associ-ated charges incurred forthe rent of the storagespace. The amount ofthe lien is $1,700.00The property subject tothis lien is:CJ5 Jeep, camper, boat,motorcycle parts, bikes,tire machine, compres-sor & misc. items.Unless full payment ismade by December 4,2014 at 5:00 p.m., theproperty becomes thepossession of NinigretDepot, L.C., to disposeof as provided by law, tosatisfy the lien. All un-paid charges will be sentto collections.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November20 & 27, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

PUBLIC NOTICE

Depot Self Storage, lo-cated at 1685 W. JamesWay, Tooele, UT, 84074,hereby gives Lionel Mi-chael Masse, last knownaddress P.O. Box18501, Kearns, UT84118 notice that we areasserting a possessorylien on the propertystored in unit #841. Thelien is asserted for un-paid rental charges, latefees, and other associ-ated charges incurred forthe rent of the storagespace. The amount ofthe lien is $1,700.00The property subject tothis lien is:CJ5 Jeep, camper, boat,motorcycle parts, bikes,tire machine, compres-sor & misc. items.Unless full payment ismade by December 4,2014 at 5:00 p.m., theproperty becomes thepossession of NinigretDepot, L.C., to disposeof as provided by law, tosatisfy the lien. All un-paid charges will be sentto collections.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November20 & 27, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF INTENT TO

DISPOSE OF UN-

CLAIMED PROPERTY

The Tooele City PoliceDepartment currentlyhas a large amount ofunclaimed property. Ifyou have had lost or sto-len property, or havebeen instructed to pickup released property,please contact!Sgt. Pot-ter at the Tooele City Po-l i c e D e p a r t m e n t(435-882-8900) for anappointment !before! De-cember 8, 2014.! For alist of property go to theTooele City web site,Tooele City Police FaceBook Page, or the UtahPublic Notice Web Site.After! December 8,2014! the property willbe disposed of in accor-dance with the UtahCode of Criminal Proce-dure, 77-24a-5.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November20, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF INTENT TO

DISPOSE OF UN-

CLAIMED PROPERTY

The Tooele City PoliceDepartment currentlyhas a large amount ofunclaimed property. Ifyou have had lost or sto-len property, or havebeen instructed to pickup released property,please contact!Sgt. Pot-ter at the Tooele City Po-l i c e D e p a r t m e n t(435-882-8900) for anappointment !before! De-cember 8, 2014.! For alist of property go to theTooele City web site,Tooele City Police FaceBook Page, or the UtahPublic Notice Web Site.After! December 8,2014! the property willbe disposed of in accor-dance with the UtahCode of Criminal Proce-dure, 77-24a-5.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November20, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

REQUEST FOR PRO-POSALSTooele City Corpora-tionDepartment of CodeCompliance90 N Main StTooele City, UT. 84074Notice is hereby giventhe Tooele City Corpora-tion, Department ofCode Compliance, willaccept Request for Pro-posals for LandscapingMaintenance OpenSpace/Tooele City Prop-erty described in generalas:Upon notification, theContractor will com-mence work from May 1to Oct 31. Typical serv-ices may include but arenot limited to: kill and / orcut, remove weeds,clean up and removegarbage, and trim treesor other bushes blockingcity sidewalks, streets orcausing a view obstruc-tion. All cut weeds mustbe cleaned up andhauled off.Proposals will be re-ceived by the City inSuite 108, of the TooeleCity Municipal Offices lo-cated at 90 N Main St,Tooele, UT 84074 until5:00 pm on Monday De-cember 1. ProposalPackets may be ob-tained on the Cities web-s i t e a t w w w .tooelecity.org/rfpAll communication rela-tive to the Request forProposals shall be di-rected to the CommunityDevelopment Directorprior to the submittaldeadline at:Tooele City Corporation90 N Main St. Tooele UT84074435-843-2130Jim Bolser [email protected] owner reserves theright to reject any or allproposals; or to waiveany informality or techni-cality in any bid in thebest interest of the City.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November11, 13, 18, 20, 25 & 27,2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

REQUEST FOR PRO-POSALSTooele City Corpora-tionDepartment of CodeCompliance90 N Main StTooele City, UT. 84074Notice is hereby giventhe Tooele City Corpora-tion, Department ofCode Compliance, willaccept Request for Pro-posals for LandscapingMaintenance OpenSpace/Tooele City Prop-erty described in generalas:Upon notification, theContractor will com-mence work from May 1to Oct 31. Typical serv-ices may include but arenot limited to: kill and / orcut, remove weeds,clean up and removegarbage, and trim treesor other bushes blockingcity sidewalks, streets orcausing a view obstruc-tion. All cut weeds mustbe cleaned up andhauled off.Proposals will be re-ceived by the City inSuite 108, of the TooeleCity Municipal Offices lo-cated at 90 N Main St,Tooele, UT 84074 until5:00 pm on Monday De-cember 1. ProposalPackets may be ob-tained on the Cities web-s i t e a t w w w .tooelecity.org/rfpAll communication rela-tive to the Request forProposals shall be di-rected to the CommunityDevelopment Directorprior to the submittaldeadline at:Tooele City Corporation90 N Main St. Tooele UT84074435-843-2130Jim Bolser [email protected] owner reserves theright to reject any or allproposals; or to waiveany informality or techni-cality in any bid in thebest interest of the City.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November11, 13, 18, 20, 25 & 27,2014)

REQUEST FOR PRO-POSALSTooele City Corpora-tionDepartment of CodeCompliance90 N Main StTooele City, UT. 84074Notice is hereby giventhe Tooele City Corpora-tion, Department ofCode Compliance, willaccept Request for Pro-posals for Rotational In-operable Vehicle Re-moval Pool described ingeneral as:Upon notification, theContractor will meet atsaid properties with theCode Enforcement Offi-cer and Police Person-nel, and remove/ tow ve-hicles from the property.Proposals will be re-ceived by the City inSuite 108, of the TooeleCity Municipal Offices lo-cated at 90 N Main St,Tooele, UT 84074 until5:00 pm on Monday De-cember 1. ProposalPackets may be ob-tained on the Cities web-s i t e a t w w w .tooelecity.org/rfpAll communication rela-tive to the Request forProposals shall be di-rected to the CommunityDevelopment Directorprior to the submittaldeadline at:Tooele City Corporation90 N Main St. Tooele UT84074435-843-2130Jim Bolser [email protected] owner reserves theright to reject any or allproposals; or to waiveany informality or techni-cality in any bid in thebest interest of the City.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November11, 13, 18, 20, 25 & 27,2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

REQUEST FOR PRO-POSALSTooele City Corpora-tionDepartment of CodeCompliance90 N Main StTooele City, UT. 84074Notice is hereby giventhe Tooele City Corpora-tion, Department ofCode Compliance, willaccept Request for Pro-posals for LandscapingMaintenance AbatementRotational Pool de-scribed in general as:Typical services may in-clude but are not limitedto: kill and / or cut, re-move weeds, clean upand remove garbage, re-fuse, dirt, rocks, or anyunsightly objects, orstructures upon thepremises in accordancewith the scope of workprovided by the CityCode Compliance Offi-cer. Work will be on anas needed basis in a ro-tational pool. However, ifthere is more than onejob, the same Contractormay be used if it fallswithin 1/4 mile of theoriginal job. Larger jobsmay require the use ofh e a v y e q u i p m e n tneeded to move largepiles of dirt, rocks andconcrete washout or cutconcrete. Proposersmust indicate in theirproposal if they are ableto provide services onlarger jobs.Proposals will be re-ceived by the City inSuite 108, of the TooeleCity Municipal Offices lo-cated at 90 N Main St,Tooele, UT 84074 until5:00 pm on Monday De-cember 1. ProposalPackets may be ob-tained on the Cities web-s i t e a t w w w .tooelecity.org/rfpAll communication rela-tive to the Request forProposals shall be di-rected to the CommunityDevelopment Directorprior to the submittaldeadline at:Tooele City Corporation90 N Main St. Tooele UT84074435-843-2130Jim Bolser [email protected] owner reserves theright to reject any or allproposals; or to waiveany informality or techni-cality in any bid in thebest interest of the City.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin November11, 13, 18, 20, 25 & 27,2014)

SUMMONS FOR PUB-LICATIONIN THE THIRD DIS-TRICT JUVENILECOURT IN AND FORTOOELE COUNTY,STATE OF UTAHCase No. 10955411/01/13STATE OF UTAH, inthe interest of M., C.,Children under 18years of age.TO: MALLORIE MA-DILL, MotherTooele CountyA Pre-Trial/ Trial con-cerning the abovenamed children is pend-ing in this Court and anadjudication will bemade which may includethe permanent termina-tion of your parentalrights.You are hereby sum-moned to appear beforethis Court in said countyon December 4, 2014 at2:00PM in the courtroomof this court located at74 South 100 East, Suite15, Tooele, Utah. Yourfailure to appear may re-sult in a default judgmentand the termination ofyour parental rights.Dated this 22nd day ofOctober, 2014.SEAN D. REYESAttorney GeneralLYNN J CLARKAssistant AttorneyGeneral(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin October30, November 6, 13 &20, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

SUMMONS FOR PUB-LICATIONIN THE THIRD DIS-TRICT JUVENILECOURT IN AND FORTOOELE COUNTY,STATE OF UTAHCase No. 10955411/01/13STATE OF UTAH, inthe interest of M., C.,Children under 18years of age.TO: MALLORIE MA-DILL, MotherTooele CountyA Pre-Trial/ Trial con-cerning the abovenamed children is pend-ing in this Court and anadjudication will bemade which may includethe permanent termina-tion of your parentalrights.You are hereby sum-moned to appear beforethis Court in said countyon December 4, 2014 at2:00PM in the courtroomof this court located at74 South 100 East, Suite15, Tooele, Utah. Yourfailure to appear may re-sult in a default judgmentand the termination ofyour parental rights.Dated this 22nd day ofOctober, 2014.SEAN D. REYESAttorney GeneralLYNN J CLARKAssistant AttorneyGeneral(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin October30, November 6, 13 &20, 2014)

SUMMONS FOR PUB-LICATIONIN THE THIRD DIS-TRICT JUVENILECOURT IN AND FORTOOELE COUNTY,STATE OF UTAHCase No. 10955411/01/13STATE OF UTAH, inthe interest of M., C.,Children under 18years of age.TO: LARRY ADAMMAXFIELD, FatherTooele CountyA Pre-Trial/ Trial con-cerning the abovenamed children is pend-ing in this Court and anadjudication will bemade which may includethe permanent termina-tion of your parentalrights.You are hereby sum-moned to appear beforethis Court in said countyon December 4, 2014 at2:00PM in the courtroomof this court located at74 South 100 East, Suite15, Tooele, Utah. Yourfailure to appear may re-sult in a default judgmentand the termination ofyour parental rights.Dated this 22nd day ofOctober, 2014.SEAN D. REYESAttorney GeneralLYNN J CLARKAssistant AttorneyGeneral(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin October30, November 6, 13 &20, 2014)

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