Shareholders give OK to build water pipeline

30
INSIDE Source: www.airquality.utah.gov Good Good Good AIR QUALITY Thursday Friday Saturday T RANSCRIPT B ULLETIN T OOELE THURSDAY May 23, 2013 www.TooeleTranscript.com Vol. 119 No. 102 50¢ SERVING T OOELE COUNTY SINCE 1894 Rush Valley Ophir Grantsville Tooele Lake Point Bauer Stockton Pine Canyon Stansbury Park Erda 72/48 67/45 75/52 72/50 73/53 72/50 72/50 62/44 74/53 74/51 WEATHER See complete forecast on A9 Oklahoman living in Tooele to send aid back home See A2 Tooele’s Jared Garbett living well after life- threatening injury See B1 BULLETIN BOARD B8 CLASSIFIEDS C6 HOMETOWN B1 OBITUARIES A8 KID SCOOP B11 SPORTS A10 by Rachel Madison STAFF WRITER A majority of Settlement Canyon Irrigation Company sharehold- ers gave the go ahead Tuesday to build a pipeline that will add nearly a half a million gallons of water into Settlement Canyon Reservoir per day. But the decision was far from unanimous, with Tooele City, the largest shareholder in the company, voting “no” for the $1.06 million proj- ect. The city wants more time to review the project, specifically because many of the irrigation company’s options to pay for the new pipeline include selling water to the city that comes from the Right Hand Fork Creek pipeline. Gary Bevan, president of the irriga- tion company, said around 100 of the company’s more than 4,000 share- holders attended Tuesday night’s meeting to vote for or against the pipeline’s construction. The num- ber of shares a person owns was the number of the votes they were allowed. A total of 62.7 percent of the votes were in favor of the pipeline. A total of 1,225 votes were in favor of the pipeline, while 728 were against. The pipeline, which will be 18 Shareholders give OK to build water pipeline Settlement Canyon Irrigation Company plans to commence project next month DAVID BERN/TTB PHOTO Buffeted by heavy winds, 178 seniors graduated from Grantsville High School in the football stadium Wednesday night. After the ceremony, graduates gathered in front of the school to launch balloons. Watching them fly while Kassidy Chamberlain gives her boyfriend, Maxwell Cook, a congratulations kiss, are (left to right) Austin Delaney, Colton Collings, Brunson Degelbeck and Quinton Smith. LISA CHRISTENSEN/TTB PHOTO Tooele City Fire Department responded to a home fire at 555 W. Isgreen Circle early Wednesday morning. The blaze gutted the brick home and is considered a total loss. Cause of fire is under investigation. by Rachel Madison STAFF WRITER A variety of community events celebrating Memorial Day will take place around Tooele County Monday. In Grantsville, Memorial Day events will begin at 8 a.m. with a flag raising ceremony at the Grantsville City Cemetery. “We do a flag ceremony and then we read the names of those who have paid the ultimate sac- rifice,” said Kristy Clark, utilities and cemetery clerk for Grantsville City. “Then we’ll have a couple of speakers.” The speakers will be retired Sgt. 1st Class Gregory Bolton, a Grantsville resident, and the current Miss Grantsville, Brylee Sparks. Across the street, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. will be an event at Clark Historic Farm. The event will begin with breakfast, called Flapjacks at the Farm, for $3 a person from 8 to 11 a.m. At 9 a.m., a historic Grantsville 5K run will begin at the Grantsville Fire Station. “Participants can run along the route and see historic homes that will be marked along the way,” said Laurie Hurst, the event’s organizer. The 5K fee is $20 for the first family member who registers, and is $10 for each family mem- ber after that. If participants register by the end of the day on Friday, they will get a T-shirt. Registration for the 5K will take place at Williams Video Friday from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., or online at clarkhistoricfarm.blogspot.com. Participants can also register the morning of the race. “All entrants will receive a his- toric booklet with descriptions of all the homes and sites along Memorial Day will have several events that thank fallen heroes by Tim Gillie STAFF WRITER Seventeen seniors from Blue Peak High School were the first seniors in Tooele County to get their diplomas this year. On May 21 the gym at BPHS, which is inside the Community Learning Center, was filled with parents, family, and friends as the seniors walked across the stage to receive their high school diplomas. Kellie Tame, a student speaker at the ceremony, started off the program by recalling her memo- ries of starting off as a student at the district’s alternative high school. “I was half way through my sophomore year and I had already missed so much school that I had no hope of making up enough credits to graduate Blue Peak graduates call school life changing by Lisa Christensen STAFF WRITER An early morning house fire in Tooele destroyed a family’s home and sent one man to the hospital. The fire at Isgreen Circle was reported at 3:47 a.m. Wednesday. When crews from the Tooele City Fire Department arrived they found flames were in full force, engulf- ing the redbrick house, said Bucky Whitehouse, assistant fire chief. Five of the six residents of the house — a man, woman and three children — had gotten out safely, he said. However, they realized they were missing one family mem- ber, a 25-year-old man, about the time a portion of the roof caved in, Whitehouse said. “That’s always alarming for fire crews to hear, that they have some- body unaccounted for,” he said. “Immediately when we hear that, it changes our strategy, and it requires us to do search and rescue strategies, where we put in two people with backup, so that if the first crew has problems, then that second crew can Crews fight ‘difficult’ fire by Lisa Christensen STAFF WRITER As excited as Grantsville High School seniors were to turn their tassels and toss their caps, the persistent wind from the north was even more so. Still, fending off a barrage of brisk, robe-billowing gusts, the 178 graduating students made their way across the stage in Cowboy Stadium Wednesday evening to receive their diplomas and end their time at GHS. And they were cheered on by a packed, standing-room-only crowd of family and well wishers. Salutatorian Carlie Hughes called the graduate class a “diverse and unique group,” citing an olio of different back- grounds, experiences, talents and inter- ests. However, she said, they all shared the common ability to think, and to change their attitudes by the types of thoughts they choose. “As different as we are from one GHS graduates ‘unique and diverse’ class SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO Blue Peak graduates Amanda Lebreton and Damarik Jacobo receive their diplomas Tuesday night. SEE PIPELINE PAGE A4 SEE GHS PAGE A8 SEE PEAK PAGE A9 SEE EVENTS PAGE A5 Tooele Jr. High athletes shine at annual track meet See A10 SEE FIRE PAGE A4

Transcript of Shareholders give OK to build water pipeline

INSIDE

Source: www.airquality.utah.gov

Good

Good

Good

AIR QUALITYThursday

Friday

Saturday

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTTTOOELE

THURSDAY May 23, 2013 www.TooeleTranscript.com Vol. 119 No. 102 50¢

SERVING TOOELE COUNTY

SINCE 1894

RIVERS AND LAKES 24-hour

Stage Change

Great Salt Lake Elevation

In feet as of 7 a.m. Wednesday

Vernon Creek at Vernon 0.98 noneSouth Willow Creek at Grantsville 1.66 -0.01

at Saltair Boat Harbor 4195.96

Th F Sa Su M Tu W

Pollen Index

Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma

HighModerate

LowAbsent

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 6:05 a.m. 8:47 p.m.Saturday 6:05 a.m. 8:48 p.m.Sunday 6:04 a.m. 8:49 p.m.Monday 6:03 a.m. 8:50 p.m.Tuesday 6:03 a.m. 8:50 p.m.Wednesday 6:02 a.m. 8:51 p.m.Thursday 6:02 a.m. 8:52 p.m.

Friday 8:35 p.m. 5:41 a.m.Saturday 9:41 p.m. 6:36 a.m.Sunday 10:41 p.m. 7:39 a.m.Monday 11:33 p.m. 8:47 a.m.Tuesday none 9:58 a.m.Wednesday 12:17 a.m. 11:08 a.m.Thursday 12:55 a.m. 12:16 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2013

75/52

72/48

72/51

71/46

72/48

67/45

75/52

72/50

73/53

72/50

72/50

62/44

67/46

74/5374/51

74/51

74/47

72/49

75/56

71/52

70/39

74/51

77/45

77/48

72/50

75/49

77/48

86/55

78/4689/56

75/4487/63 80/47

80/49

74/4286/53

76/48

66/39

77/46

Full Last New First

May 24 May 31 June 8 June 16

F Sa Su M Tu W Th

Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed

FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY

Mostly sunny

72 50

Partly sunny

78 50

Mostly sunny and pleasant

75 45

Sunshine mixing with some clouds

73 48

Mostly cloudy with a couple of t-storms

73

Partly sunny

74 51 51

Warmer with sunshine and patchy clouds

82 58TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER

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

lows.

High/Low past week 82/41Normal high/low past week 73/49Average temp past week 59.1Normal average temp past week 61.3

Statistics for the week ending May 22.

WEATHER

See complete forecast on A9

Oklahoman living in Tooele to send aid back home See A2

Tooele’s Jared Garbett living well after life-threatening injury See B1

BULLETIN BOARD B8

CLASSIFIEDS C6

HOMETOWN B1

OBITUARIES A8

KID SCOOP B11

SPORTS A10

by Rachel Madison

STAFF WRITER

A majority of Settlement Canyon Irrigation Company sharehold-ers gave the go ahead Tuesday to build a pipeline that will add nearly a half a million gallons of water into Settlement Canyon Reservoir per day.

But the decision was far from unanimous, with Tooele City, the largest shareholder in the company, voting “no” for the $1.06 million proj-ect.

The city wants more time to review the project, specifically because many of the irrigation company’s options to pay for the new pipeline

include selling water to the city that comes from the Right Hand Fork Creek pipeline.

Gary Bevan, president of the irriga-tion company, said around 100 of the company’s more than 4,000 share-holders attended Tuesday night’s meeting to vote for or against the pipeline’s construction. The num-ber of shares a person owns was the number of the votes they were allowed.

A total of 62.7 percent of the votes were in favor of the pipeline. A total of 1,225 votes were in favor of the pipeline, while 728 were against.

The pipeline, which will be 18

Shareholders give OK to build water pipeline Settlement Canyon Irrigation Company plans to commence project next month

DAVID BERN/TTB PHOTO

Buffeted by heavy winds, 178 seniors graduated from Grantsville High School in the football stadium Wednesday night. After the ceremony, graduates gathered in front of the school to launch balloons. Watching them fly while Kassidy Chamberlain gives her boyfriend, Maxwell Cook, a congratulations kiss, are (left to right) Austin Delaney, Colton Collings, Brunson Degelbeck and Quinton Smith.

LISA CHRISTENSEN/TTB PHOTO

Tooele City Fire Department responded to a home fire at 555 W. Isgreen Circle early Wednesday morning. The blaze gutted the brick home and is considered a total loss. Cause of fire is under investigation.

by Rachel Madison

STAFF WRITER

A variety of community events celebrating Memorial Day will take place around Tooele County Monday.

In Grantsville, Memorial Day events will begin at 8 a.m. with

a flag raising ceremony at the Grantsville City Cemetery.

“We do a flag ceremony and then we read the names of those who have paid the ultimate sac-rifice,” said Kristy Clark, utilities and cemetery clerk for Grantsville City. “Then we’ll have a couple of speakers.”

The speakers will be retired Sgt. 1st Class Gregory Bolton, a Grantsville resident, and the current Miss Grantsville, Brylee Sparks.

Across the street, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. will be an event at Clark Historic Farm. The event will begin with breakfast, called

Flapjacks at the Farm, for $3 a person from 8 to 11 a.m.

At 9 a.m., a historic Grantsville 5K run will begin at the Grantsville Fire Station.

“Participants can run along the route and see historic homes that will be marked along the way,” said Laurie Hurst, the

event’s organizer.The 5K fee is $20 for the first

family member who registers, and is $10 for each family mem-ber after that. If participants register by the end of the day on Friday, they will get a T-shirt. Registration for the 5K will take place at Williams Video Friday

from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., or online at clarkhistoricfarm.blogspot.com. Participants can also register the morning of the race.

“All entrants will receive a his-toric booklet with descriptions of all the homes and sites along

Memorial Day will have several events that thank fallen heroes

by Tim Gillie

STAFF WRITER

Seventeen seniors from Blue Peak High School were the first seniors in Tooele County to get their diplomas this year.

On May 21 the gym at BPHS, which is inside the Community Learning Center, was filled with parents, family, and friends as the seniors walked across the stage to receive their high school diplomas.

Kellie Tame, a student speaker at the ceremony, started off the program by recalling her memo-ries of starting off as a student at the district’s alternative high school.

“I was half way through my sophomore year and I had already missed so much school that I had no hope of making up enough credits to graduate

Blue Peak graduates call school life changing

by Lisa Christensen

STAFF WRITER

An early morning house fire in Tooele destroyed a family’s home and sent one man to the hospital.

The fire at Isgreen Circle was reported at 3:47 a.m. Wednesday. When crews from the Tooele City Fire Department arrived they found flames were in full force, engulf-ing the redbrick house, said Bucky Whitehouse, assistant fire chief.

Five of the six residents of the house — a man, woman and three children — had gotten out safely,

he said. However, they realized they were missing one family mem-ber, a 25-year-old man, about the time a portion of the roof caved in, Whitehouse said.

“That’s always alarming for fire crews to hear, that they have some-body unaccounted for,” he said. “Immediately when we hear that, it changes our strategy, and it requires us to do search and rescue strategies, where we put in two people with backup, so that if the first crew has problems, then that second crew can

Crews fight ‘difficult’ fire

by Lisa Christensen

STAFF WRITER

As excited as Grantsville High School seniors were to turn their tassels and toss their caps, the persistent wind from the north was even more so.

Still, fending off a barrage of brisk, robe-billowing gusts, the 178 graduating

students made their way across the stage in Cowboy Stadium Wednesday evening to receive their diplomas and end their time at GHS.

And they were cheered on by a packed, standing-room-only crowd of family and well wishers.

Salutatorian Carlie Hughes called the graduate class a “diverse and unique

group,” citing an olio of different back-grounds, experiences, talents and inter-ests. However, she said, they all shared the common ability to think, and to change their attitudes by the types of thoughts they choose.

“As different as we are from one

GHS graduates ‘unique and diverse’ class

SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO

Blue Peak graduates Amanda Lebreton and Damarik Jacobo receive their diplomas Tuesday night.

SEE PIPELINE PAGE A4 ➤

SEE GHS PAGE A8 ➤

SEE PEAK PAGE A9 ➤

SEE EVENTS PAGE A5 ➤

BTOOELEOOELETOOELET

THURSDAY HURSDAY HURSDAY May 23, 2013

Tooele Jr. High athletes shine at

annual track meet See A10

SEE FIRE PAGE A4 ➤

FRONT PAGE A1FRONT PAGE A1

by Tim Gillie

STAFF WRITER

A Tooele City resident who grew up in Oklahoma is seek-ing donations that she will tow back to Oklahoma in a trailer to help families devastated by Monday’s tragic tornado.

Tenisha Hess, of Overlake, grew up in Hulbert, Okla. 30 minutes outside of the area where Monday afternoon a massive tornado touched down and cut a patch over a mile wide.

It reportedly destroyed 13,000 homes, sending count-less cars airborne, and demol-ished occupied schools. There were 24 fatalities.

“I wanted to do something to help and I know others in

Tooele that want to do some-thing to help,” said Hess.

She decided to load her ATV trailer with supplies that res-cue workers in Oklahoma have been requesting.

Hess will park her trailer in front of the Big 5 store on Tooele City’s Main Street from 9 a.m. to noon on Friday and Saturday. She will also accept donations by drop off at her home at 296 Drysdale Way through May 28, or until the trailer is full.

Items that have been request-ed for donation include: leather gloves, shovels, rakes, ther-moses, batteries, flashlights, coffee pots, antibiotic cream, Band-Aids, first aid kits, soap, body wash, bottled hand soap, hand sanitizer, deodorant, feminine products, shampoo, cream rinse, shaving cream and razors.

Additional items include toothbrushes, toothpaste, bath towels, washcloths, baby for-mula, baby food, baby diapers, baby blankets, bottles, toilet paper, Styrofoam cups, bleach, mops, brooms, buckets, laun-dry detergent, plastic cups and cutlery, paper goods plates and bowls, napkins, paper towels, disposable gloves, trash bags, cat and dog food, plastic con-tainers, blankets, gift cards, bottled water, and non-perish-able food [email protected]

Tooele resident collecting donations to helpfamilies devastated by Oklahoma tornado

A2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN THURSDAY May 23, 2013

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The Transcript-Bulletin welcomes news items from the local business community of 150 words or less. Businesses can send news of awards, promotions, internal milestones, new business ventures, new hires, relocations, partnerships, major transactions and other items to David Bern via email at [email protected], via fax at (435) 882-6123, or via regular mail at P.O. Box 390, Tooele, UT 84074.

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In Tuesday’s Page One story, “Stansbury softball brings home school’s first 3A cham-pionship,” the headline and story should have clarified that it was Stansbury High School’s first athletic state championship. SHS’s first 3A state championship of any kind was won by the school’s drama students on April 13 in a 3A state drama competi-tion.

CORRECTION

DAVID BERN/TTB PHOTO

Tenisha Hess of Tooele is originally from Oklahoma and is driving back there in a week to visit family — and to deliver donated supplies to aid tornado victims. On Saturday, the trailer behind her will be parked at Big 5 Sporting Goods where citizens can drop off donated items.

by Lisa ChristensenSTAFF WRITER

A Stansbury Park man who frequented child pornography sites in effort to turn others in before getting pulled in himself, has been given a suspended jail sentence and probation.

Shawn Simmons, 21, was sentenced in 3rd District Court Tuesday to eight suspended sentences of a year each, as well

as three years of probation.The case originated last

August when Simmons’ girl-friend contacted police after finding about 20 images of girls approximately one to eight years in age in sexually com-promised positions.

Detectives from the Tooele County Sheriff’s Office inter-viewed Simmons, who told them there was nothing on his phone. Later in the interview,

however, he told the officers he had downloaded images on his phone but deleted them, and that he had exchanged images with people on a child pornog-raphy website.

Simmons said he had origi-nally gone to the website and made contact with other users in an attempt to turn them into the police, but became inter-ested himself in the child por-nography.

Between his phone and computer, an analysis from the Utah Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, found six possible child pornography vid-eos, ranging in length between 14 and 57 seconds long, and 83 possible child pornography images.

Simmons was originally charged with 10 counts of sexu-al exploitation of a minor, a sec-ond-degree felony, in October.

He pleaded guilty to reduced charges, class A misdemeanor lewdness involving a child, in April.

In addition to probation and the suspended sentence, Simmons was sentenced to six days in jail, for which he was given credit for time served, and must wear an ankle moni-tor for 180 [email protected]

Stansbury man get suspended jail sentence for child porn

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THURSDAY May 23, 2013 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

by Tim GillieSTAFF WRITER

The public will have access to Middle Canyon for Memorial Day weekend.

Middle Canyon Road was opened today, according to Rod Thompson, Tooele County road department director.

“We usually have the road open for Memorial Day weekend and it is open for this weekend,” he said.

The dirt and gravel road is closed during winter months

because the steep grade, com-bined with snow, makes it unsafe to travel, according to Thompson.

Tooele County road depart-ment crews ventured up Middle Canyon road Wednesday, clear-ing downed limbs and other obstacles to make sure the road was navigable.

On the other end of the road, Salt County Public Works Operations reports that they will open Butterfield Canyon road Friday in time to allow access to Butterfield Canyon for the week-

end.Kennecott Utah Copper will

close access to the Oquirrh Overlook that provides a view into Bingham Canyon Mine, according to Thompson.

“Kennecott people told us they have already had problems with people on ATV’s driving up to the overlook and trying to get a view of the slide,” said Thompson. “They plan on keeping the over-look closed until they can put a fence around the parking lot.”[email protected]

Middle Canyon Road opened today for vehicles and visitors

by Lisa ChristensenSTAFF WRITER

This Memorial Day, there is a place to put flowers for Betty Kite.

Last fall, John Workman, a for-mer Tooele resident, set out to get a grave marker for his friend who tragically died 50 years ago.

Kite, a 17-year-old Tooele High School senior, was killed on Halloween night in 1962 while hitchhiking back to Tooele from Stockton where she and a friend had been trick-or-treat-ing. Kite, dressed as a hobo, and her friend, Claudia Scott, were pushing each other play-fully beside SR-36 as they tried to catch a ride back home. Kite’s mother, Edna, was walking with them.

Just then, a car going south-bound came upon the two girls and woman. Swerving to miss Scott, the driver hit Kite instead. She was thrown 75 feet and suf-fered a fractured skull and bro-ken neck. She died in front of her mother.

Workman, a childhood friend of Kite’s, discovered that her grave still did not have a headstone even 50 years later. He launched a campaign for the half-century anniversary. Workman, who lives in Salt Lake, said he was unsure of how much of a response he would get for his efforts, but felt the memory of his friend was

worth it regardless if anyone else remembered her.

However, he quickly found that much of the Class of 1963 still remembered their former classmate — after being con-tacted by class member Delbert Mitchell, information passed through the grapevine, and a Transcript-Bulletin article that

ran last October.“The response was immediate.

As soon as the paper was deliv-ered, the evening the story was in, I got phone calls from Betty’s classmates,” said Workman. “One thing that I learned is the class of 1963 is a very close class, but it wasn’t just their donations. It was donations from people

who either currently still lived in Tooele or who moved away and read the article.”

Mitchell, who now lives in Las Vegas, said he was excited to be part of Workman’s efforts to put a marker on Kite’s grave.

“I was very estatic about it,” he said. “At the time of her death in 1962, I was a pallbearer at her

funeral, so I just assumed the family had a marker on her grave and I was absolutely appalled that she had been forgotten all these years. So I was very happy that John Workman called me and I put the word out to the class to have one made.”

Workman said he anticipated an amount for a modest head-stone could take about a year to be collected, but as donations flew in from Tooele, through-out Utah, across the nation and even as far away as Tokyo, that amount was quickly exceeded.

“I knew that there would be people that would be interest-ed. I had a pretty strong feel-ing about that,” he said. “What I didn’t expect was that it would happen so quickly and with so many people, and from all across the country and out of the country. I didn’t expect that. And I expected that it might take up to a year. But as the funds kept coming in, we were able to get a nicer headstone.”

A larger headstone than he had planned was put on the grave in December. Carolyn Sagers, another member of the Class of 1963, was involved with designing the stone.

Workman said while he is hap-piest about fulfilling his goal to get a headstone for Kite, he was surprised at the tenderness and generosity displayed by others who remembered the girl.

“It’s been an experience that’s really affected me in a way I didn’t think it would. It’s really reinforced my faith in mankind,” he said. “We live in a world where there’s a lot of negativity, there’s a lot of bad things that are happening around in the world, and to see so many people want to be involved in it, and some of the comments people made, some people sent notes with their checks. It just reinforces my faith that there are a lot of good people out there.”[email protected]

After 50 years, gravestone is finally in place for Betty Kite

DAVID BERN/TTB PHOTO

A headstone for the late Betty Kite was recently put in place at the Tooele City Cemetery. Classmates from the Class of 1963 contributed funds for the marker. The woman was killed in 1962 by a motorist while walking beside SR-36 with a friend and her mother.

by Lisa ChristensenSTAFF WRITER

West Wendover police were involved with two foot chases over the weekend for two sep-arate incidents.

Early Sunday morning, an officer from the West Wendover Police Department saw a vehicle run two stop signs in a residential area, then take a screeching turn in an intersection, according to a press release from the department. The officer tried to stop the vehicle, but before he could, the vehicle drove off the road and into a house, the release states.

The driver got out of the vehicle and started running along the sidewalk, with the officer giving chase on foot, according to the press release. The release states that the officer caught Johnny Carrillo-Mendoza, 20, of West Wendover, as he was trying to leap over a fence.

Carrillo-Mendoza is sus-pected to have been alleg-edly driving under the influ-ence of alcohol at the time he crashed into the house. An open container of alcohol was found in the car, according to the release. The man had also allegedly been driving a car that he borrowed with-out the owner’s knowledge or consent.

The house had minor dam-

age from the crash, while the vehicle had moderate dam-age. Carrillo-Mendoza was booked into the Elko County Jail on charges of two counts of stop sign violation and one count each of reckless driving, disobedience to a police offi-cer, open alcohol container in a vehicle, driving under the influence, hit and run — prop-erty damage, and unlawful taking of a motor vehicle.

A day later, in the wee hours of Monday morning, West Wendover police officers saw a car run a stop sign on Wendover Boulevard and tried to stop the vehicle, but the driver sped up, according to a press release.

The vehicle stopped in the parking lot of a casino, and the driver ran into the build-ing, and was followed on foot by the officers, who arrest-ed him inside, according to the release. The driver, John Ramirez-Juarez, 24, of Salt Lake City, was placed in the holding section of the patrol car.

However, despite being handcuffed, Ramirez-Juarez was able to roll the window down and climbed out of the patrol car, according to the release. He tried to again run from officers, but officers caught him and put him back into the patrol vehicle.

When officers searched Ramirez-Juarez’s vehicle, they

found a hollowed-out apple with burned marijuana resi-due that had apparently been used as a pipe to smoke the drug, according to the press release. The vehicle’s registra-tion was also expired.

He was booked into the Elko County Jail on charges of stop sign violation, eluding a police officer, escape from custody, expired vehicle regis-tration and possession of drug [email protected]

West Wendover police forced to chase two suspects on foot after separate crashes

Betty Kite

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inches wide and made of heavy duty plastic, will begin about 25 feet above the yellow gate in an area known as Sawmill Flat. It will run for approximately two miles alongside the canyon road to the reservoir.

The project will replace a pipeline that was washed out in the early 1980s due to excess mountain runoff. The loan for the pipeline has been provided by the state’s Clean Water State Revolving Fund. The annual pay-ment of the loan has been esti-mated at $65,000.

“The majority of the people were for it, but Tooele City used its 711 votes to vote against it,” said Bevan. “Then there were a few small shareholders who also voted against it.”

Bevan said Tooele City is the largest shareholder in the com-pany. It owns 711 shares, or about 17 percent.

“If the city hadn’t voted against it, the percentage would have been in the high 90s,” he said. “I got an email from Tooele City just before the meeting asking us to table the vote for 30 days so they could get more informa-tion. They said if we didn’t table it, they would vote their shares against it.”

Bevan said the city, as well as Tooele City Councilman Steve Pruden, mentioned the city had not received a letter informing them about the meeting and vote.

“Every shareholder was sent a notice,” Bevan said. “I am positive Tooele City got a notice. Who got it or what they did with it, I don’t know. I really think when the city came and made the proposal to table the pipeline, it made the shareholders mad. I think maybe

people felt like the city was being heavy handed.”

Pruden said he was the only councilman able to attend the Tuesday meeting because the rest of the council and mayor were at the International Council of Shopping Centers in Las Vegas.

“The first we heard of the pipe-line was an article [that ran in the May 9 edition of the Transcript-Bulletin],” he said. “We weren’t made aware of the meeting until the Saturday before. My staff, who I have to rely on, told me we didn’t receive anything.”

Bevan said he responded to the city’s email and said he would mention tabling the vote to the shareholders at the meeting. But when he mentioned it, no one made a motion to table the vote.

“The motion we got was to take the vote,” he said. “There was a motion made and it was seconded, so the shareholders took the vote and did not do the 30-day extension. The share-holders basically made the deci-sion that they wanted to vote last night and not wait 30 days longer.”

Pruden said the reason why the city wanted to table the vote, and subsequently voted against the pipeline, is because several of the irrigation company’s strate-gies to pay for the $65,000 annual fee involved the city buying water from the company.

“We were not consulted when those ideas were put together,” he said. “We are not opposed to the pipeline, because we agree that it needs to be replaced, but we felt that as a large shareholder, there needed to be more discussion before that vote was taken.”

Before the shareholders’ meet-ing, Bevan devised several ways in which to pay for the pipeline. His main hope is to sell water piped from Right Hand Fork Creek to Tooele City for culinary use between October and April.

During that time, irrigation water is turned off.

“I have figured that selling water to the city will make the payments,” he said. “At the very least, the pipeline pipes 800 gal-lons a minute. I have seen it pipe up to 2,500 gallons a minute. If we sell the water to the city for $90 per acre foot for seven months when it’s pumping just 800 gallons a minute, that will make the annual payment.”

Pruden said if $65,000 is the amount the irrigation company wants the city to commit to on a yearly basis, that’s something the city needs to discuss with the company beforehand.

“A lot of variables could be eas-ily resolved if we sat down and talked about it, but that hasn’t happened,” he said. “We felt that a wise move would be to get bids first, find out the exact cost and then discuss the funding mech-anism for the pipeline. We felt like the decision was putting the cart before the horse. We’re not opposed to the pipeline, but how it’s being paid for.”

Although the city voted against

the construction of the pipeline, the project will continue to move forward. Now that sharehold-ers have approved it, Bevan said there is some legal paperwork the company’s attorney needs to take care of, and then the project will go out for bid.

“The company has already had its plan approved,” said Tooele resident Stew Paulick, chairman of the Utah Board of Water Resources — the policy-making body of the Division of Water Resources. “Now that the vote by the shareholders is done, an analysis of legal aspects of the project by an attorney will do things, like verify the company has water rights and is a good corporation.”

Bevan said he hopes to put the project out for bid in early June and have it under way by the end of June so that the pipeline will be completed by this fall.

“The bottom line is that peo-ple understand that we can’t let water run to waste,” added Paulick. “This pipeline will save a lot of water.”[email protected]

A4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Pipeline continued from page A1

DAVID BERN/TTB FILE PHOTO

Settlement Canyon Irrigation Company approved the construction of a pipeline that will cost $1.06 million. The decision was not unanimous as Tooele City voted against the project.

immediately go in.”Before crews could enter the

house to look for the man, how-ever, the fire had to be doused enough to not imperil the fire-fighters. Crews began suppress-ing the fire just before 4 a.m. with some firefighters fighting the flames from the inside before the home’s infrastructure became too damaged. Wind from the south only fanned the fire.

“One of the complexities of this fire was the fire had vent-ed through the roofline and it was being fed by the wind we had [Wednesday morning], so

that sped up how fast it spread throughout the house,” said Whitehouse. “As the fire was spreading, it burned through all the trusses in the hallway, which was the only way to the base-ment. We had firefighters trying to put out the fire from the inside, and then we had people on the outside who noticed the roof was starting to sag. Once the roofline collapsed, we were able to put out the fire on the roof and start search and rescue operations. It was a difficult fire to fight.”

Crews entered the home as soon as the fire had been sup-pressed enough for safety. When they found no one on the main floor, they went down into the basement where they found the

man. Both two-man crews were required to carry him out, said Whitehouse.

“Obviously, they’re uncon-scious, they’re limp and they’re very difficult to lift. They’re dead weight,” he said. “You add in all of the heavy equipment the firefighters are wearing and the water, and it’s a very, very difficult thing to do.”

The man, despite being trapped in a burning house, was still alive.

“When we pulled him from the house he had a heart rate and was breathing, so we requested an air lift,” said Whitehouse.

The man was flown by medical helicopter to a Salt Lake hospital. Whitehouse said he did not know

the man’s condition, but that he had been treated for carbon monoxide poisoning.

The house is considered to be a total loss. Whitehouse said between the value of the home and a new car parked in its car-port, the monetary damage is estimated to be around $175,000.

Crews remained at the scene until about noon Wednesday, making sure all flames and hotspots were extinguished. Meantime, an investigation into the cause of the fire was con-ducted. The cause is still unde-termined, but the investigation is currently centered around the back of the house, Whitehouse [email protected]

Fire continued from page A1

by Rachel Madison

STAFF WRITER

The Live Fit Tooele County Coalition has created a summer walking program that challenges individuals and families to walk, bike or run several miles over the next few months.

The program, which officially began May 19, will run through Aug. 20. Individuals and families are challenged to walk, run or bike a marathon — 26.2 miles — throughout the summer, accord-ing to Malaena Toohey, health educator and obesity preven-tion coordinator for the Tooele County Health Department, and chair of the Live Fit Tooele County Coalition. Each family must walk the entire 26.2 miles together.

“If people get going now, they can accomplish that,” Toohey said. “They have the whole sum-mer to accomplish the goal.”

To sign up for the program, residents can visit the Live Fit website at livefittc.org. A pop-up box on the home page will take them to the page where they can register for the challenge, down-load and print a tracking form, and find out how many laps they have to do at local parks to walk a mile.

“People can use the existing walking paths at the parks, but they can also walk in their own neighborhoods or use a treadmill at the gym and track their own mileage,” said Toohey.

According to the Live Fit website, one and one-fourth laps around England Acres is a mile; two and three-fourths laps around Rancho Park is a mile; three laps around Parker’s Park is a mile; and two and one-fourth laps around Skyline Park is a mile.

Once an individual or a fam-ily has walked, biked or run 26.2 miles, they can submit their tracking form and information on the Live Fit website to be entered into a prize drawing. A variety of health-related prizes have been

donated to the coalition and will be up for grabs at the end of the challenge in August.

For each additional 10 miles an individual or family walks, they can enter the drawing another time.

“We’re trying to encourage people to increase their physical activity by just walking,” Toohey said. “We have resources here with nice trails and parks around. We’re hoping that once some-body begins the campaign, they will keep their activity level going once the campaign ends and will have increased activity through-out the campaign.”

If the campaign goes well this summer, Toohey said the Live Fit Tooele County Coalition hopes to do other walking campaigns, like starting a hiking club where

members can explore trails des-ignated by Tooele County Trails, or shutting down a city street to do a community walk.

“Right now we need the com-munity to support the walking campaign and show interest,” she said. “But in the future, I would love to see a day and time when we bring the community together and walk together. A lot of people find its easier to be active if it’s done with others. We could have fun, be united and be exercising at the same time.”

Toohey said the coalition is always looking for input from the community when it comes to future events and campaigns. The coalition has created a sur-vey and recommends county residents fill it out so their ideas can be heard.

“I would strongly encourage the community’s input in the sur-vey,” said Toohey. “Anyone who fills out the survey and submits their contact information will be entered into a prize drawing for a 100-square-foot pop-up gazebo.”

The deadline for the survey is June 1 and it can be accessed at https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/LiveFitTooeleCounty2013. “This survey will really help Live Fit Tooele County know where the community’s inter-ests lie and help guide future programs and grant funding,” Toohey added.

For more information, to ask questions, or to participate in the summer walking program, visit [email protected]

Live Fit creates new summer walking program

DAVID BERN/TTB PHOTO

Tooele resident Nancy Stallings speed walks through an Overlake neighborhood Wednesday afternoon. To encourage more residents to walk or run, Live Fit Tooele County Coalition is launching a new summer walking program.

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THURSDAY May 23, 2013 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A5

I don’t think it’s chance that mosquito season and shorts season coincide; I’m pretty

sure the nasty little bloodsuckers planned it that way.

Specifically, I think they plan to hatch and take flight just in time for me to bust out the shorts.

It’s like the dirty things know I can’t ignore the warm, linger-ing evenings or bright, promis-ing mornings. If you don’t see many during the heat of the day, that’s because in their collective mind they know that I work in an office, inside, in an area that’s hard for them to reach. So they sit outside, biding their time, until I leave, making myself easy prey.

The second spring hits, any skin visible instantly becomes freckled with big pink dots, and they all itch horribly. If there are any mosquitos in the remote area, I will find them — or rather, they will find me. I have

gone out into the middle of the desert, miles away from any real source of water, and come back with fresh bites. I’m just gifted like that.

I’m not suggesting I am mosquitos’ only prey. Plenty of other people get bitten. And as “Jurassic Park” teaches us, they’ve been around millions of years, while I’ve only been kick-ing for a couple of decades, so obviously they fed on zillions of other organisms before I came along. I’m just saying, I’m pretty sure I’m their favorite food.

The simple fact of the mat-ter is mosquitos love me (the feeling is not mutual). Actually, everything that likes blood loves

me. I must just have really tasty platelets or something. Why else would I have been sent that plaque certifying me as getting a five-star rating from Hematophagy Monthly?

Besides my thousands of encounters with mosquitos, I have been an unwilling buffet for Grantsville’s biting gnats, even though I’ve used enough bug repellant to create my own hole in the ozone. Once I slept in the same room as a cousin visiting from England. I came away from our brief and dis-tant sleepover with a persistent group of hitchhikers from Great Britain — lice. Does your dog or cat have fleas? Find out by having me pet it, and watch the little black specks attack me in droves. Had I lived during the Dark Ages, I probably would have had the great distinction of being the first to keel over from the Black Plague.

Since the bedbug epidemic

started, I haven’t traveled any-where near the East Coast or the South, and on the rare occa-sions when I’ve had to stay in a hotel room, I have obsessively researched bedbug outbreaks in the area and then done my own check on the facilities. I won’t get in any bodies of water that might have leeches anymore. Once was plenty.

The fan club for my blood isn’t limited to invertebrates. It seems like every time I step foot in a doctor’s office they’re always whipping out a needle and asking me to pick an arm. I constantly get emails and letters from the American Red Cross asking me to come back just as soon as I’ve rebuilt enough of my blood supply from the last time they took a pint. Curse the deliciousness of my universal blood type!

And my friends wonder why I don’t like “Twilight.”

So far my experience with

pests has been limited to those who “vant to sahck my blahd,” but I don’t want to take my chances with other things that depend on slurping away anoth-er animal’s body for food. South America sounds like a great vacation destination until I think about the intestinal parasite one cousin came back with, and the bone-eating fungus another got. Already done the living souvenir thing, thanks. Even domestically, I don’t take chances. I mean, I do realize rare steaks allow you to savor the quality of the beef better than those that are turned into charcoal briquettes, but is the taste of top-tier Kobe really worth the remote risk of getting a new friend for your digestive tract to play with?

So far, this year seems to be one of the worse ones for mos-quitos. I’ve already walked into massive swarms of the things several times this year, and it’s only May. And they seem to be

enormous this year; I’m pretty sure I saw a small child being taken by a cloud of mosquitos down at the Grantsville ball park the other day.

I might not be able to change the tastiness of my blood, but there are a couple of obvious solutions to my problem of getting bit. The first one that springs to my mind is creating a sort of mosquito-net couture line, and wearing that every-where for five months. I think it would be a real hit among the malaria-dodging set. Or I could just go everywhere in a kind of mosquito-proof ball, like a hamster. After hearing those ideas, my mother came up with her own: just wear long sleeves and long pants and not go out at dusk, night or dawn.

But come on. That’s a ridicu-lous suggestion. It’s summer, after [email protected]

The fan club of my blood isn’t just limited to invertebratesLisa Christensen

STAFF WRITERLi

OUT & ABOUT

the race route,” said Hurst. “The booklets can also be purchased later that day for $3. We have the Wrathall home, the John Rich home, and some homes peo-ple wouldn’t guess are historic. Most of the homes were built before 1910. People who don’t want to be in the 5K can pick up the booklet and go on a walking tour.”

In addition to the break-fast and race, there will be a Dutch oven cook-off from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Participants for that event can also register at Williams Video Friday evening. Registration is free.

Throughout the day, there will also be a J. Reuben Clark free-dom walk and tribute to sol-diers from Grantsville who have passed away. There will also be craft booths, a kids’ craft barn, music and activities.

All proceeds from the break-fast, 5K and booklet sales will go toward the preservation and upkeep of Clark Historic Farm. Contact Hurst at 435-884-4409 for more details or to volunteer.

In Tooele, a Memorial Day ser-vice will be held at Veteran’s Park on Monday at 11 a.m.

Dave McCall, Tooele City Council chairman and orga-nizer of the event, said Tooele City Mayor Patrick Dunlavy will begin the event by welcoming everyone, and then the focus will be turned to the new local chap-ter of the Disabled American Veterans, which was formed in Tooele County last month.

“We want to have more of an outreach for the World War II, Korean and Vietnam War veter-ans,” McCall said. ”The empha-sis of the event will be getting them registered with the DAV chapter. We want the veterans to let us know who they are so we can give them a remembrance.”

The Miss Tooele City royalty

will sing at the event, and the Tooele High School band will be there to play music.

“The local VFW will be doing the 21-gun salute, and the Marine Corps League will be posting the colors,” McCall said. “All of us will be there together for one common goal, which is remembering those who have gone before us.”

In Stansbury Park, the fourth annual Historic Benson Gristmill Memorial Day 5K will take place following a flag ceremony at 8:50 a.m. at the flagpole at the mill. The ceremony will be performed by local members of the mili-tary.

Registration for the 5K will take place between 7:30 a.m. and 8:30 a.m. and the 5K will begin at 9 a.m. Cost is $20 per person, $90 for a family of up to five, and $15 for additional immediate family members.

Pre-registration can be done online at http://www.rob-ertsstudio.net/bensonmill5k/ or

in person at Premier Athletics in Tooele. Online registrants will be charged a $1 processing fee.

From 8 a.m. to noon on Memorial Day, the Tooele County Democratic Party will provide service booths at both the Grantsville and Tooele cem-eteries.

Hazel Reed, activities chair for the party, said the booths will have tombstone cleaning sup-plies, such as vinegar, empty milk cartons for carrying water, garbage bags and grass cutting tools available to anyone who would like to use them. She said volunteers will also offer their help to cut back overgrown grass and clean headstones.

The booths will be set up at the gazebo at the Grantsville City Cemetery and near the main entrance at the Tooele City Cemetery.

To volunteer, email Reed at [email protected] or call 843-2423. [email protected]

Events continued from page A1

Subscribe Today • 882-0050

A5

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• administrative support to the Board of Directors

• accounts payable & receivable

• preparation of financial reports

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• other duties as requested.

OFFICE ADMINISTRATORPART TIME - 25 HRS PER WK MIN.

Starting salary $12-$13 per hr., depending upon experience.

Please email your resume [email protected] by June 2, 2013

APPLICANTS MUST HAVE:• experience with QuickBooks Version 2009 or higher• experience with Microsoft Word and Excel• knowledge of basic accounting rules• experience with email communication & website management• excellent interpersonal, oral and written communication skills• a positive disposition.• experience with office management protocols

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Beehive Broadband partners with Digis Networks

Lakepoint, Utah 5-23-2013

Beehive Broadband (originally Wireless Beehive) has joined forces with Digis Broadband. Digis is assuming the operation of the wireless internet and Beehive is giving total focus to its Fiber-to-the-Home network.

Chuck McCown, CEO of Beehive Broadband states:

"We have been honored to have been the premier wireless internet service provider in our service areas over the past 10 years. The growth has been phenomenal and it continues.

Over the past five years, Wireless Beehive has become Beehive Broadband and our main focus for Beehive Broadband has shifted to Fiber-to-the-Home along with phone and cable TV. In order to provide that segment of our business the majority of our attention, we have divested most of our wireless customers to another company.

That company is Digis (In Nevada they operate as Big Dog). Digis is the largest wireless internet service provider in the nation. They are well known and use only the best equipment and networking methods. They will be able to continue to upgrade the system and give you great service for years to come.

Beehive is still the underlying carrier for the wireless system, transporting the internet connection to and from the towers on our fiber optic network. Digis will have the responsibility for all customer service and payment for the wireless network.

Nothing changes for the Beehive Broadband fiber customers.

While we know that some of our long time customers were surprised by this announcement, we were constrained by certain non-disclosure documents that limited what we could say prior to this date. Digis has been courting Beehive for more than five years and I am sure they will take good care of the customer base. We want to emphasize that we are still here, still in business and growing our fiber network faster than ever. As a matter of fact, we have recently launched on the UTOPIA network as well. So Beehive Broadband is now available to many more customers than ever before."

For additional information, please contact us at 435-837-6000.

###

A5

TOOELE HIGH SCHOOLCarson Aagard Nicholas Abarca Summer AdamsTritton AdamsElizabeth AhlstromKayla AhlstromSarah AldrichShellbie AllredElizabeth Alvarado McKenzie Alvarez Kaela Andersen Kayllah Anderson Richie AndradeAlex AragonCarlos AragonCaden ArnoldJulio ArroyaveMelissa Atwood Colton BaetzMarven Bahena Brian Bailey Leanna BakerAlyssa Banks Jessica Barber Ashley BarneyMakayla BeckKole Beckstead Bo Bennett Taylor Bennett McKinley Benson Morgan Benson Lauren Bergen Makaylee BirdMindi BirdBrittney Bissegger Kaitlyn Bitters ChyAnne BlackChristopher BlumMatthew Booth Tayler Boswell Briana BoultonTaylor Boyd Andrew BrewertonAlexis Brozovich Jessica BrownLaura Bryan Ellexis BuckJeanne BuhlPatrick BurdenAlisha ByersTyler Cahoon Michael CaldwellAlyssa Candelario David CanhamKole CarberryAlexandria CarmanKelsey Carter Mariah CaseTrever CaseLevi Cassity Johnny ChaconPaul ChaconWhitney ChevalierShawna Cheyne Ralph ChristensenShaelyn Christiansen Gabriel Clark

Colton ClaysonKeith Cochrane Zachary Co� manAlyssa CollinsBrandon CookBrian CookBritney CookMiranda CooperElizabeth CoriellMollie CrinerJacquelyn CrispAaron DeesDaniel DixonBrayden Dobson Dalton DrakeDuwaine Droz Cayley DunnLavee DutsonSusie DutsonHaileigh EarlBrandon EldredgeChristina Eldridge Monique Esplin Eno-abasi EtokidemMackenzie FaitCasin Ferney Elijah FishKyle Fletcher Devin Franks Angelo GarciaMichaela Garcia Orion Gavin Steven GidneySamantha GlaserC.J. GoldsberryDaniel GonzalesAustin Gonzalez Hope GordonNatalee Greco Ty Green Ashlee Gri� th Hailey GrossmanNala Hall Erin Hammond Lorraine HammondEmeri HansenJennifer HansenKevin (KC) HansenKevin P. HansenAlexis HardyAlley HarmerTaylor Harris Steve Hartley Zachary HarwardAustin HealBriley Heap Cynthia HeckliCaitlin HensleyBrent Hesford Jade Hill Tanner HollienAlec Holmstrom Duncan HoltCory Hu� manAustin HughesMichael HunterShyAnn HunterSamuel IriarteBrianah JacobsKatie Jensen

McKayla Jensen � omas JensenMichelle JeysBrandon JohnsonDalten JohnsonGarrett JohnsonKirsti Johnson Kiyome Johnson Kristine JohnsonWilliam JohnsonJustin JolleyRaven JonesMark JourniganMickenzie KeyCourtney KilbyRio KingRachelle KrishAaron Kurek Courtnie LaneLogan Lang Logan Langford Cassandra LarkinWyatt LarsenRobert LaRueHarmony Legge Joshua LewisKayla LewisTravis Lewis Logan Louderback Roger LozanoIsaac LuckChasity LuskBraden MacDonaldMitchell Mall Casey MaloneyDarby ManchesterRebecca ManchesterSeth ManningChelsea ManzanaresCierra Martinez Marcus MartinezShane MartinezVeronica MartinezJeremy Max� eldLevi MayohAshlee McClimansStacey MedleyMadison MerrillMorgan MieraAdam MikesellMadeline MillerFelicia Minchew Larissa MontoyaSkyler MorganBreydan Morrison Logan Mott Hannah MurphyDaccoda NamannyJordan NeafseyDenniqa NelsonEmilce NewellZoë NewmanChad Nieberger Spencer Nielsen Jackson Nielson Carlos OlmosKaitlin OlneyMonica Orellana RomeroTimothy Ottesen Melanie Paiz Arana

Briana Patillo Kialey Patten Tynan PeacockLogan PectolJoshua Perkins Tajia PerkinsAndrew PetersenNicholas PorterTonisha PulliamAnthony QuintanaJake RedmanAspen ReidZachary ReidGuy RemickZachary RichinsAlex Richter Elliott RiegelEthan RigbyNichole RileyKasyn RobertsonNatalie RobinsonSarah RoseMelanie RoundyTyler Roybal Nicholas RzepkowskiDedra Salazar Destiny Salazar Demetrio SamaniegoSydney SamplesJoseph Sandoval Alexander Savage McKae Searle Kyler SegoDerrick ShawLogan ShieldsScott Shivers McKaylee SmithQuinten SmithJames SnowRemington Snow Jade SnyderJared SpeckDestiny SpradlingAmelia Staten Xavier Steck Kieson StewartTeah StokesMichael StoweKeaton StrateJeremy StraubSean StrechJohnny Sullivan Aspen SuttonAndrew Swan Tyler TannerAlexandria TaronBrennen Taylor Samantha Tennant-NicholasGage � amert Andrew � omasJonathan � omas Ryan Tomac Alexa TorgensenLeticia TorresHannah Triana Courtnie TurnbowKyle TurnerNeal UssingMichael ValenciaZachary Valenzuela

Chelsie VanDerwerken Dylan VangrimbergenAlexxis VanvalkenburgAlex Velasquez McCall VoigtMartin VonRotzAdriana Waldhouse Shaydan Walker Joshua WallaceMegan Warner Brennen WarrDalton WeylandStevie WhippleSierra Whipple-Padgen Rilee White Shelby WhiteBrandon WikerJoshua WikerTaylor WillMadeline WilliamsAlex Wilson Dean Wilson Austin Wolter Alec WolvertonTyler Woodru� Chase Woods Jaime WrathallMariah YarbroughDarek Yei Peter Young

STANSBURY HIGH SCHOOLRuben Isaac AldazMichelle AldreteNatalie Jane AllenAustin AllredShane M. AllredErika Rae AlveyBeau LaRell AndersonFilip J. AndersonJarrett Dean AndersonLogan AndrusAna Rosa ArreolaMaya Vivian ArzolaKirsten Dawn AsherJake McKray AtherleyZachery Scott AustinJason Tyler BagnaschiKimberly Ann BakerEmily BarnesAndrew L. BarrettJanessa BatesTyler BatesDalton BeardAbram BeazerJenna Marie BeckerSierra Taylor BeersMiles Gordon BellistonBrek Darin BentleyAshley Christine BirdDustin Johnson BolligerJasmine M. BorupJordyn Alyssa BourneJason Kaleb BowenWyatt Quick BranchMagdeline BromleyAlexander D. BrowerAlyssa Nicole Brown

Joshua Scott BrownM’Kenna BrownRyan Glenn BrownJackson Lloyd BrundageKaylie BrunsdaleDakota Shae BrunsonVeronica N. BryanCheyenne Marie BuchananJonathan Edward BuckendorfJustina B. BuckleyIbis Brianna BustillosDalton Neil ButlerAnnie Elise Butter� eldDacota CaseHunter David CaseyJohn Christian-Wright CassmanNiko Anthony ChaconZachary Taylor ChadwickRachel Lyn ChamberlinAlyssa Marie ChaseColin Andrew ChittyBryton Travis ChristensenHunter Gordon ClarkeJackson Christopher ClausingBrenden John ClellandKyler Nicholas ClementsJane Seymour CockerDaniel Eugene ColeChristian Eli CollierDustin CookJesseca Leigh CornettKevin Austin CoxDakota Lynn CrumpAnna Michelle CunninghamElijah Grant CurtisCharles Spencer DahlePaige Monique DayCody D. DeanAlexander Travis DerbidgeHauna Mikhayla DeSomerKaitlyn Mae DittyKatelyn Emma DixonTanner Loyd DroubayKatsiaryna DubrouskayaMadison Naomi Du� nCourtney Nicole DunmanEhlana Bo DurfeeKevin O. DustinKierstin Deanne DysonAngelique Kay EatchelCody Kay EatchelKrista Eleanor ElliottBladimir EquihuaJocelyn Guadalupe EquihuaJara Hunde EsheteLense Hunde EsheteLindsay A. EvansMcKaylee Ann FarrerAlec William FeboRyan Steven FiskMarlee Alyssa FlintMorgan Brianne ForsterMercedes Paige FrancisHannah B. FrazierLynn Taylor FredericksonJustin Tyler FrenchJohnathon � omas FullmerMalcom Christopher GarciaJake Austin GarrickCheyenne Elaine Garrison

Matthew Wade GaumondJoshua Donald GibsonAmanda Bree GilesMadelyn Saige GillettMacey Elizabeth GodfreyAlisha Verlaine GolsanSiera Chaille GomezWyatt GottfredsonBrett Allen GrahamChaeRin GreeneTrevor James GreenlandHailey Marie GrossmanMichelle Ann GublerLindsay Louise GuymonAbraham South HaggartShantell Annena HambyChristopher Austin HansenShaelee HansenSteven Alexander HansenMonica HansonSarah HardyLeana Alexandria HarrisCarter Teancum HatchMcKenna Kay HeapBraedon M. HeapsPaul De Shane HendricksonMegan HenrieAlyssa Christine HerreraIvan HerreraKailyn HintonHailey Kristine HopkinsLyndee Nicole HorrocksAnacaira HortaNicholes Russell HoughtonEmily HoustonTaylor Jasper HouzeJohnathan Jared HowlandEthan Tyler HuntValerie Michell HustonWeston C. HutsellCarlee Sue HydeArmando Herera Inzurriaga Jr.Emily JacksonToni Danielle JarrettDarius JohnsonJakob Dallin JohnsonNicole Sara JohnsonTyler JohnsonChelsea Leone JonesDallas Robert JonesHailey Lynn JonesJocelyn JJ KaufmanOlivia Lyn KeithBrendan Daniel KelleyAaron Jacob KellySerina Anna KennicottZachary Douglas KernNunia Pepetua Heleni KioaJoshua Louis Kirchho� Shaidrea Ivis Ko� elKaela M. KolbKatherine Alesandra KotykSierra Marie KrippnerKrystle A. KuesterEmily Sabrina KummerSkyler Dee KunzKayla Ann LabrumHaylie Rene LealMichael Allan LentzJerson Richardo Leon

Lane Shawn LiddellKristin Mikelle LingardRebecca L. LordsRyan Jay LorensenRachel Lynn LukerStormie Skyler LynchBraden Vance MacDonaldEmily Koleen MadsenShayna Luzon MairCasey Ann MangumKarlee Margene ManzioneSeth Michael MarbleRachel Christine MarshLorencia Sierra MartinezRoy Anthony MartinezAndrew William MasonKalee Setsuko MasonJacob Jordan MaughanKathryn Kay Max� eldColton Todd MayJaclynn LeAnn MayJohn Hyrum McClatchyBrandon Hanmi McGuireZachary Michael McKayTrey Kelly McRaeJessica Pearl MellorAustin Jacob MeredithShaleece Ivy MerrellCole Bennett MersethAndrew Scott MichaelisZachary Kenneth MillsJonah Kristopher MilnerErnesto MontesSamantha Dale MontgomeryJaron Vernal MoonRyan Payne MorganDarick Dell MorrellAustin-Jay Richard MorreyGrace MorrisonCameron MorrowAudrianna Scheyla MorseAndrew Nicholas MoselyMikena Gabriel MunozDillon Lee NeufeldMackenzie Kaye NevilleJackson Dean NicholesAlyssa June O’RardenEddie Jerry OjedaCourtney Elizabeth OlofsonJack William OrrAlixzandria Joann OsborneMaKayla Lynn PainterJennifer Dianne PalmerNatasha Marie PaloAudrey Elizabeth ParksElisabetta Giulia ParozziMichael Ray PaulsenMichael Sean PayneBrian PerezRyan Todd PettingillTracy Kip PorterHannah Marie PrattHeather Lauren PrescottChelsie Renee PritzkauCarson Joseph PronkDavid Joseph PuttZoe Noel RasmussenAustin Jason Rawls� ania Grisel RecinosLuke Lenard Richards

Megan Ashley RichardsonAshley Marie RobbinsRyan Gregory RobbinsAnna Marie RobertsKatelyn Jeanette RobinsonKylei Jessica RobinsonMathew Edward RogersVanessa Marie RomeroShandi Lynae RoseRachael Elsa RosengrenAustin Christopher RussoAgustin Myong SaavedraJoseph Miles SagersAngelic Alicia SalazarRyan SaundersAshley Nicole SchaubRyan K. ScoonoverJessica Mareah ScottDaniel Jerry ScribnerKylie Morgan SearleDominick Joseph SellersChance Dean ShieldsMichael Joseph SibsonMitchell James SiehAustin � omas SladeKirsten Amy SloanAshley Kate SmithMadeline SmithAlaysha Kathryn SonntagAlexis Lynn SparksBrooke Nicole SquiresAshley E. StakerChandler Macneil StaleyHunter William StallingsSkyler Wyatt StanworthJonathan Earl SteeleLogan Jack StegelmeierTyler StevensGage D. StewartLogan Scott StewartZeljko StojanovicAlexandra StrainElise K. SutherlandHanna TaggartMikaela Ann TarpleyCody TaylorRhianna Amelia TaylorBryce Chandler TerryCheyenne M. � omasSarah Jordan � omasJoshua J. � ompsonAshleigh Kay � orntonStone Ray TiaKody Valden TophamRon Loring TotmanTanner Austin TrimbleNoemi TrinidadSamantha K. TrippLaura Kathryn TrussellChristina Elizabeth TurnerJoshua David UleryHailey Nikole UlibarriManuela Guadalupe ValenzuelaMorgan Ann VorwallerBraden Edward WallHailey WallaceKaylee Mariska WardMcKenna Lynette WarickLorrin K. WarrRobert Allen Watson

Miranda WaymanBreeAnna Marie WendtJena L. WendtDanaka Myra WheatleyEric John WhitesidesKelly Sue WhitmerKeltsie Rose WiceLisa WillemsAndrew Michael WilliamsDanielle Marie WilliamsKatelynn Ann WilsonRachel Leeanne WilsonJuan Adriel WinklerTelisa Marianne WintersAndrew John WorkmanWill Branson Worsencro� Jenesse Blair WrightKyle Jackson WynnTanner Lewis YatesEmerald Mae YostCody James YoungMax D. YoungAlana Rose Zimmerman

GRANTSVILLE HIGH SCHOOLDavid AkersKevin AndreasenJordan AndreasonChad BaldyBrandon BanfordColton BarneyBaylee BarrusManuel BegayShayna BehuninAutumn BellBryson BouldenJohnny BoutwellMarcus BouwmanJacob BroadheadJansen BrownShelbie BrownTi� ani BushDallas CainColton CarlsonTeasha CarsonMorgan CastagnoRenee CastagnoKassidy ChamberlainJamie ChapmanAnna ChristensenMelissa ChristiansenRicardo CisnerosAustin ClarkSkyler ClowardBethany ColesColton CollingsSidney ConradMaxwell CookSahale CoxKyle CraigAubrey CritchlowTeagan CritchlowJulie CurtisKyra DeakinBronson DegelbeckAustin DelaneyBryan DelaneyMayson Dell

Jacob DodgeCalum DoughertySteven DouglasBayli DowdleDerik DudleyBren DurfeeHeath DurrantShad EastCaleb EdwardsRyan EllettDillon EllisTanner ElsholzRees EricksonForest ErnstKrysta FaveroBrandon FischerKaden FongerJe� rey GaileyVivian GardnerAlexis GasserCody GibsonChanele GravittJared GreenburgCameron GundersonNoel Had� eldJayci HaleBraydon HamatakeLandon HammondStephen HansenJeremiah HardingRushton HauserDaniel HaynieJessica HiltonHailey HuberCarlie HughesBreana IpsonMason JamesAmanda JensenCarley JohnsonCharlotte JohnsonJonathan JohnsonLogan JohnsonMadeline JohnsonNathan JohnsonTaycee JohnsonKrista KirschmanTayden KunkelJared LambertKelby LandonErica LarsenJennsen LeeNicole LeeShawn LeeRobert LehmanJoseph LongJoseph LopezLandon LucasAlejandra MadrigalCourtney MasseyAmy MatthewsStratton McCordAllison MemmottSkyler MillerJordan MillsHalen MolgardColton MondragonIvy MontgomeryHarley MortensonJohnathan MortonStewart Nelson

Jacoby NielsenDaniel OgdenDevin OrgillTayler OrgillMiranda PackLance ParksLandon ParksBrittney ParsonsMacie PaulichAbigale PetersonNathan PhelpsShawndee PittBrianna PoeKaiden PriceShelby RandallAubree RedmondClay ReedEmily RiceJoshua RichardsonJosue RichesWilliam Rie� anaughBenjamin RigbySarah RustErik SattlerAustin SchmidtHoustin Schro� Benjamin SeekinsMallory SerrAshley SimpsonJames SmithMegan SmithQuinton SmithJames SnowNicole StanworthBrandon SteinTegan SteinfeldtLuke StrattonShelby SullivanLance TaggartRhianna TaylorJames TerryAlexandria TippetsSidney TippettsEthan TracyWhitney TurnerHailey WallaceKaleb WareTyrel WarnerShayanne WarrAshley WarrenTaylor WatersClarissa WeaverJustin WellsCassady WhearJustice WheelerKara WhiteShayla WhiteJonathan WhiteheadShalayne WilcoxShianne WilliamsBryant WilsonLinsey WilsonRobert WinterTukker Wol� eyTaylor Wright

BLUE PEAK HIGH SCHOOLKortland CaldwellCristen CastagnoAdam ConklinNickolas GrooHunter HawkesDamarik JacoboAmanda LebretonMadeline MarpleApril PierrenAlexander PinkneyCassandra QuaidZachary SharpKellie TameWilliam UlinRian WalkerMichelle WoodwardAshton Wright

DUGWAY HIGH SCHOOLJazsmin Micalah AbeneTaylor Mackenzie BillingsJacob Raymond BridgmanNathaniel Robert BroadheadNadaja LeSHea BullockBrittany April CoonMeagan Rebecca EasterlyWilliam Curtis EstesShawn Michael GraesserKatreena Lynn JohnsonMary Eleanor JohnsonWilliam Everett JonesCrystal Marie OsbahrKaitlin Melinda SimmonsQuentin Belt � ackeray

WENDOVER HIGH SCHOOLMaria Aguirre Cinthia Barrera Diana BarreraMargarita Bermejo Maria Carlos Caroline DelmuroMartha DesantiagoMartha DominguezTyler HardmanMonika HernandezAdriana HigleySavanah HuntKatheryn LeMieuxGamaliel LopezRicardo LozanoErika MaldonadoTeresa MayoChristina MendozaEdgar MendozaValerie MurphyIrvin OrtizGenaro RiveraJasmine RoblesJoseph RuizDeisy TrujilloRaul TrujilloAna ValleAlexandro Zamora

CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 2013

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OBITUARIES

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Juan F. Vigil

Juan F. Vigil was born on Nov. 26, 1928 in Pikin, Colo. He passed away May 19 after a long battle with numerous illnesses. Juan grew up in the depression. He left school after the eighth grade to help out his family financially, doing odd jobs. He entered military ser-vice at a young age. Juan moved to Tooele in 1950 where he met and married his wife of 58 years, Bertha. He worked at Tooele Army Depot and retired after 35 years. Juan is survived by his wife, Bertha, daughter Barbara (Glen) Merrell, grandson Carlos (Hillary,) and three great-grand-daughters: Adrianna, Aaliyah and Irianna. He loved those great-granddaughters. His eyes

would sparkle whenever he saw them. He will be greatly missed by all who loved and knew him. Funeral services will be May 24 at St. Marguerite Catholic

Church, 15 S. Seventh St. in Tooele. The visitation will begin at 11 a.m. and mass will begin at noon. Interment will be in the Tooele City Cemetery.

Allison Louise JacobsenNov. 22, 1959 - May 18, 2013

“Each happiness of yesterday

is a memory for tomorrow. You’re always on my mind; forever in my heart.” We love you, Allie. You are going to be deeply missed. She was greeted into heaven by mother Kathleen and brother Kenneth. She is survived by Kurt, daughters Lacey and Heather, grandchild Gavin, and an angel of a friend Duane. A celebra-tion of life will be held May 24 at 6 p.m. at New Life Christian Church, 411 E. Utah Ave. (200 North) in Tooele.

Georgia D. DaffernOct. 17, 1926 - May 16, 2013

“Georgia D” Daffern, 86, of Lake Point, died May 16 at Mountain West Medical Center in Tooele. The viewing will be held at 10 a.m. on May 25 at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints’ Lake Point Ward building, 1350 E. Canyon Road in Lake Point. Services will start at 11 a.m. Georgia will be laid to rest at the Lake Point Cemetery. Georgia was born Georgia D. Newland on Oct. 17, 1926 in Inglewood, Calif., the daughter of Georgia and Wilford Newland. She married Earl G. Daffern on June 15, 1945 in Gardena, Calif., and they were sealed together on July 29, 1947 in the St. George Temple in St. George. She moved to Lake Point in early 1998 with her husband Earl and their

son Timothy and his family. Georgia enjoyed many things in her later years. Among these were visiting her family, watch-ing old movies, reading scrip-tures, traveling by RV, visiting the temple, lunches with her friends, playing with her great-

grandchildren, serving oth-ers, doing genealogy work and organizing family gatherings. Throughout her life she was a loving and devoted wife and mother. Georgia is preceded in death by her husband Earl G. Daffern, her youngest son Timothy W. Daffern, and her younger sister Patricia Springer. Georgia is survived by her brother Wayne Newland, sister Norma Newland Pierce, chil-dren E. Sharon Daffern Albert (Buck) of Boring, Ore.; Linda E. Daffern Estes of Plummer, Idaho; Gary G. Daffern (Brenda) of Provo; Daniel J. Daffern, (Debbie) of Athol, Idaho; Christine A. Daffern Jones, (Ken) of Alpine; Loretta M. Daffern Musgrave, (Scott) of Orofino, Idaho; daughter-in-law Lori A. Overton Daffern of Lake Point; 39 grandchildren and 88 great-grandchildren.

DAVID BERN/TTB PHOTO

Shalayne Wilcox visits with a classmate during the graduation ceremony.

DAVID BERN/TTB PHOTO

The GHS graduating class was battered by high winds throughout the ceremony, but it had little affect on the evening’s high spirits.

another, we all have something in common: We are all thinkers of thoughts,” she said. “Choosing the way we think will help us change the way we see the world.”

Valedictorian Sahale Cox urged her classmates to view their past as building blocks of the future, and to make the most of the present in order to make it a better past.

“The past is what makes each and every one of us who we are,” she said. “If we changed the past we wouldn’t be who we are. ... Make today worth remembering. Live for the present.”

Cox said although the number 13 is commonly regarded as an omen of bad luck, she believed graduating in 2013 would instead be a positive portent for their class.

“For us, it is the start of the rest of our lives,” she said. “Remember, you are incredible. You are a lucky 13. Go rock life. Make today worth remember-ing.”

The speaker at Wednesday’s ceremony, Krista Hutchins, reflected on her own graduation

from Grantsville High 25 years ago, when she was convinced her best days were behind her.

“I loved this school. I loved this field. I loved wearing red, white and black. I loved cheer-ing for the Cowboys,” she said. “I thought that life would never be as good as it was in 1988, so I sobbed at my graduation. But, my friends, I was wrong. Life has gotten better and better and better.”

Hutchins suggested remem-bering three things to help improve life after high school: Be good and remember that what a person does often reflects upon their family and friends; be happy through helping others; and stand for something, and have the courage to defend it.

Although graduates would now be leaving Grantsville High, she said, their time at the school would live on with them.

“Even though you leave us today, we will always be your fans, and we will always cheer for you,” she said.

In addition to the speakers, musical numbers were per-formed by Hughes, the senior choir and a group consisting of Ricky Cisneros, Jared Greenburg and Bryant [email protected]

GHS continued from page A1

Inspiring Healthy Lives

Look for it every month in your Tooele Transcript Bulletin

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELE

A8 OBITUARY

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We Miss You

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AUG 3, 1937MAY 25, 2011

MAR 26, 1936MAY 24, 2008

MARRIED MAY 24, 1957

Your GardenSitting in your garden,I come to think.

And sometimes all the memories,come back in just a blink.

The beauty of the fl owers.The sunshine on my face.

Kinda makes me wonder,Where have I seen this place?

It must have been awhile ago.Somewhere in my past.

It’s buried deep in my memory.It’s beauty ever last.

I took a little piece of it,and hoped you wouldn’t mind.

I’m going to take it home with me,and give it lots of time.

And also give it love and care,it’s foundation just the same.

And hopefully it will grow just like,the one from whence it came.

-Paula Jane

A8 OBITUARY

E-mail us:[email protected]

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

THURSDAY May 23, 2013 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO

Blue Peak graduates (from left) Nickolas Groo, Alex Pinkney, Adam Conklin, William Ulin, Zachary Sharp, Ashton Wright and Hunter Hawkes receive their diplomas Tuesday night.

SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO

Blue Peak teacher Tracie Sneed speaks Tuesday night at the commencement program.

on time,” she said. “I was not happy when I was told that I had to come here, but now I am glad I got to come here. The teachers here truly help, not only with education, but with life.”

The BPHS student body of 85 students consists of former stu-dents from other high schools in the county who, mostly due to lack of attendance, are at risk of not graduating.

Graduates of BPHS are unique, according to Terry Linares, Tooele County School District superin-tendent.

“Blue Peak High School is the only high school in the district that requires service learning for graduation,” Linares told the graduates. “You have learned to contribute to your community.

Now I give you one more chal-lenge, help change the life of someone else.”

Empowered by her experi-ence at BPHS, Cristen Castagno, another student speaker, encour-aged her classmates to continue to labor for accomplishments.

“We came here as children and we leave as responsible adults ready to meet the challenges ahead,” said Castagno. “We must try to excel in all that we do and strive for excellence. We have the power to achieve.”

Amanda Lebreton, a graduat-ing senior, said the faculty and staff at BPHS helped her to turn around her attitude about edu-cation.

“I had not been to school in a year and a half when I came to Blue Peak,” she said. “I learned the hard way that life is about choices and consequences, good and bad.”

Lebreton made the choice to

earn a diploma despite being very far behind in credits, she said.

“This is an amazing school,” said Lebreton. “Education has changed us and helped us to grow in many ways. We are ready to work hard and be productive citizens.”

Tracie Sneed, social science teacher at BPHS, was the final speaker.

Sneed encouraged the grad-uates to go forth and live an authentic life.

“Move forward from here and have an authentic life,” she said. “You can have an authentic life if you are real, true, and learn to be you.”

“You are real and are of great value,” added Sneed. “This is real tonight. Let it be purposeful. Let it be real, be true to yourself, never lie to yourself, take respon-sibility for your life.”[email protected]

Peak continued from page A1

CELEBRATING THE AMERICAN SPIRIT

Every Tuesday in your Tooele Transcript Bulletin

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELE

A9

A9

RIVERS AND LAKES 24-hour

Stage Change

Great Salt Lake Elevation

In feet as of 7 a.m. Wednesday

Vernon Creek at Vernon 0.98 noneSouth Willow Creek at Grantsville 1.66 -0.01

at Saltair Boat Harbor 4195.96

Th F Sa Su M Tu W

Pollen Index

Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma

HighModerate

LowAbsent

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 6:05 a.m. 8:47 p.m.Saturday 6:05 a.m. 8:48 p.m.Sunday 6:04 a.m. 8:49 p.m.Monday 6:03 a.m. 8:50 p.m.Tuesday 6:03 a.m. 8:50 p.m.Wednesday 6:02 a.m. 8:51 p.m.Thursday 6:02 a.m. 8:52 p.m.

Friday 8:35 p.m. 5:41 a.m.Saturday 9:41 p.m. 6:36 a.m.Sunday 10:41 p.m. 7:39 a.m.Monday 11:33 p.m. 8:47 a.m.Tuesday none 9:58 a.m.Wednesday 12:17 a.m. 11:08 a.m.Thursday 12:55 a.m. 12:16 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2013

75/52

72/48

72/51

71/46

72/48

67/45

75/52

72/50

73/53

72/50

72/50

62/44

67/46

74/5374/51

74/51

74/47

72/49

75/56

71/52

70/39

74/51

77/45

77/48

72/50

75/49

77/48

86/55

78/4689/56

75/4487/63 80/47

80/49

74/4286/53

76/48

66/39

77/46

Full Last New First

May 24 May 31 June 8 June 16

F Sa Su M Tu W Th

Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed

FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY

Mostly sunny

72 50

Partly sunny

78 50

Mostly sunny and pleasant

75 45

Sunshine mixing with some clouds

73 48

Mostly cloudy with a couple of t-storms

73

Partly sunny

74 51 51

Warmer with sunshine and patchy clouds

82 58TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER

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

lows.

High/Low past week 82/41Normal high/low past week 73/49Average temp past week 59.1Normal average temp past week 61.3

Statistics for the week ending May 22.

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A9

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Sports

FROM THE SIDELINES

SPORTS WRAP Volleyball campVolleyball Elite Sports camp hosted by Tooele High School for girls in the sev-enth through 12th grades will be held May 28-30. This is an excellent camp for fundamental development for all skill levels. College coaches and players will be instructing. Those interested in participating can register at the finance office at Tooele High School. The cost is $130. For questions, contact Kristi Brown at [email protected] Summer Volleyball programJr. Cowboy Round-up for fourth- through ninth-grade girls (or first time high school players). June 10-13, 8-11 a.m. at GHS gyms, $40 (includes free volley-ball while supplies last). Learn impor-tant volleyball fundamentals of serving, passing, setting, attacking and position play. Setting (RS) Clinic for sixth-12th grade. June 10-13, 6:30-9 p.m. at GHS large gym, $20 flat fee. Improve hand contact, footwork, ball control and consistency. This clinic is not just for setters. Hitters will benefit from this as well. GHS Championship TEAM Camp for sixth-12th grade on June 17-20 at GHS. Incoming eighth-12th grade $110 ($130 includes 2-day tourna-ment, ninth-12th grade). Sixth-seventh grade $80. Focus will be all game-like fundamentals. Includes a two-day tournament at Springville/Spanish Fork on June 28 and 29. Sign up by May 30. Pick up your registration forms at the GHS front desk through the end of May.Tennis CampTooele High School will hold a ten-nis camp for students entering grades second through ninth at the tennis courts Tuesday through Friday, May 28-31. Cost is $30 per person. Family discout of $25 for second child and more. Camp coaches will be THS tennis coaches Lyle Nielson and Terry Weddle and varsity players. Players will be divid-ed into ability groups. Particpants need to bring their own tennis racket and proper athletic attire and tennis shoes. For more information contact Nielson at (541) 274-0290 or Weddle (435) 841-7735. or [email protected] or [email protected] hoop campThe All-Star Hoop Camp at Tooele High School will be held June 3-6. The camp will be hosted by the Tooele High School varsity basketball staff and varsity play-ers. The camp is geared to help players master the fundamentals that make a great player. The camp will feature ball handling, passing, defense, guard play, post play, communication, rebounding, team concepts and shooting. Each participant will receive a camp T-shirt. Boys entering grades ninth through 12th will play from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m.; boys entering grades second to fifth will play from 10 a.m. to noon; and boys entering grades sixth to eighth will play from noon to 2 p.m. For more informa-tion contact THS head coach Shawn Faux (801) 921-9205. Camp fee is $60 payable at the THS finance office or by phone at (435) 833-1978.GHS hoop clinicGrantsville Boys basketball and coach-ing staff will be putting on a Cowboy Basketball Clinic June 17-20 at Grantsville Junior High. All boys and girls going into second grade through ninth grade are invited to attend. Grades sec-ond through fifth will go from 9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. and grades sixth through ninth will go from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. All skill levels are welcome. Cost is $35 (collected on first day of clinic). Participants will all receive a Cowboy T-shirt, awards and prizes will also be given out to select individuals. To sign up please email your child’s name and shirt size to [email protected] or [email protected] footballStansbury youth football sign-ups are ongoing. In-person registrations will be from 9 a.m. to noon at the Stansbury Clubhouse on June 15 and July 13. Please print two copies of the online registration.Basketball campThe Tooele High School girls basket-ball team is sponsoring a summer basketball camp for girls in grades K-12 (2013-14 school year). The camp will be held Monday, June 10 through Thursday, June 13 at Tooele High School. Grades 9-12 will be from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. Grades K-8 will be from 10:30 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. The cost is $30 and will include quality instruction from THS coaches and players and a camp T-shirt. Contact Kris Ashby at [email protected] for informa-tion and a registration form.Soccer registrationTC United Soccer is now accepting applications for the Fall 2013/Spring 2014 season. Visit our website www.tcunited.org for details. Registration will close on June 17, 2013.Salt Lake BeesThe Memphis Redbirds delivered a beatdown of the Salt Lake Bees Wednesday in a 17-6 game. The Bees gave up 19 hits to the Redbirds, and they gave up 11 runs in the first three innings. The Bees made an effort in the bottom of the ninth inning with four runs scored, but it wasn’t near enough to come back. All nine players in Memphis’ starting lineup had at least one hit in the game. The loss puts the Bees’ record at 23-24 on the season and six games behind Tacoma in the standings. The Bees play one more home game against the Redbirds tonight before hitting the road for a four-game set in Las Vegas.NBA PlayoffsMiami opened the Eastern Conference Finals with a 103-102 victory over Indiana Wednesday night in Miami. The two teams play a second game on Friday at 6:30 p.m. on TNT. San Antonio travels to Memphis on Saturday to continue its Western Conference Finals series with the Grizzlies. That game will be televised on ESPN at 7 p.m. The Spurs lead Memphis 2-0.

A10 THURSDAY May 23, 2013

Saturday was about as good as it gets for Stansbury High School athletics.

First, you had the Stansbury softball team winning the state championship in St. George while the Stansbury boys track team was racking up points at the 3A State Track Chamipionships at BYU for a third-place finish. The track guys were only one point away from second place.

The softball team was in the groove all season, but state tourneys can be a little tricky and nerve-racking when you go up against the top teams. Life is easy when you play teams like Ben Lomond, Morgan and Ogden. But eventually you face the Bear Rivers and Spanish Forks of the softball world.

Judging by post state-cham-pionship comments, these Stansbury players had all the confidence in the world that they would win a state title. Even after the first setback on

Saturday to Spanish Fork.Stansbury had no weakness

with players who were solid in the field and could pound the ball when they picked up the bat. The team even came com-plete wth a human “Cheetah” whose speed made life miser-able for opponents.

Coach Bridget Clinton should be commended for molding the talented group.

With all these wonderful ingredients, the team really hit its stride when sophomore pitcher Kimbri Herring settled into her role as the main pitcher. After all, finding a great pitcher seems to be half the battle in girls softball. Herring pitched all the games in the state tourna-ment and finished the season

with a 17-2 record. The good news for Stansbury is she’ll be back for the next two sea-sons. Could we be looking at a dynasty?

There also is good news for the track team with junior Dallon Didericksen returning next season.

Didericksen racked up 20 of Stanbury’s 64 points at the state track meet Saturday all on his own by winning the 100-meter

run in the early afternoon and then the 200-meter about three hours later that day. In between, he anchored Stansbury’s 4x100 state champion relay team, which gave the Stallions another 10 team points. Stansbury repeated as state champions in the 4x100 relay with Hudson Conrad, Tyler Jensen, Zayne Anderson and Didericksen. The four runners clocked 43.14 in the race.

Didericksen has been invit-ed to compete in the Great Southwest Track & Field Classic in Albuquerque, N.M., June 5-8. This year he clocked the fourth-fastest time in all Utah classifi-cations in the 100 meters with a time of 10.98.

Austin Slade was another fabulous peformer at the state track meet, providing 16 points with top finishes in the 1600 and 3200 races.

Superb team execution on the sports field is a wonderful thing and essential for state champi-onships. That’s what we got with the Stansbury softball team on Saturday. The boys track team had a fabulous day as well.

Sometimes, however, a pair of performers provide the spark that makes it all work to lead you to the promised land. Herring and Didericksen filled those roles to perfection on [email protected]

Pair of top performers provided spark for success

by Richard Valdez

CORRESPONDENT

Tooele Jr. High’s track teams defended their titles as the top county boys and girls teams at the annual district event held at Stansbury High School on Monday. Despite a heavy early morning rainstorm, the skies cleared up as the meet got under-way with very little rain and even some midday sunshine.

Leading with 205 points, the TJHS boys team defeated sec-ond place Clarke Johnsen, which scored 140.5. Grantsville Jr. High finished third with 66 points. Excelsior Academy and Wendover finished fourth and fifth, respectively. This was the fourth straight year the Tooele boys have won the district title.

In a closer race for the team title, Tooele’s girls edged Clarke Johnsen, scoring 173 points to Clarke’s 134. Grantsville came in third with 75 points, edging Excelsior by one point with 74. Wendover finished in fifth place. The victory was the third con-secutive title for the Tooele girls.

The annual event is in its sev-enth year. It was started in 2007 by Grantsville Junior High prin-cipal Charlie Mohler.

Fourteen meet records were broken in this year’s meet, with Clarke Johnsen and Tooele Junior each claiming seven new records.

Tooele’s Pete Smith, who cap-tured first in four events, broke Hudson Conrad’s (CJ-2011) record in the 200 with a 24.25 time. Amir French (CJ) grabbed second place, followed by David Delmuro (W), Blake Paystrup (T), Sam Frazier (Ex), Dawson Banks (T), Lane Steed (T) and Jamin Peacock (CJ) rounding out the eight placers who scored for their respective teams. Tooele’s Emily Egelund won the girls’ 200.

Abby Silva (G) finished second followed by Kass Loertscher (CJ), Madeline Wihongi (CJ), Makayla Peterson (T) and Chelsie DeSantiago (T). Paige Boyce (Ex) and Chealsie Beckstead (T) tied for seventh.

In the 100 dash, Smith (T) captured first with a time of 11.75. Coming is second was French (CJ) and Tooele’s Lincoln Powers finished third. Brady Soltes (G), Peacock (CJ), Brayden Borders (T) and Jaymen Wilson (CJ) finished third through sev-enth with Tooele’s Derik Merino and Delmuro (W) coming in tied for eighth.

In the girls’ 100, DeSantiago (T) finished first in 13.88, just .03 seconds ahead of McKenna Banks (T), who came in second. Moana Kioa (CJ), Abby Silva (G),

Emily Egelund (T), Natalee Dent (CJ), Bobbi Jo Meyer (Ex) and Brooklyn Lewis (T) finished out the top eight places.

Smith captured his third title of the meet and set a meet high jump record when he jumped 5’6”. Teammates Merino and McKay Pollman also broke Ryan Medina’s (T-2011) record of 5’4” when they all tied Smith at 5’6”. Coming in fourth place was Brady Soltes (G). Clarke’s Cody Castleton and Spencer Griffith finished fifth and sixth, respectively. Nathan Ault (G) and Peacock (CJ) tied for seventh.

Only five girls cleared the opening jump, with Tooele’s Kenadee Valdez capturing first with a 4’9” leap and breaking the old mark of 4’8” set in 2008 by Tooele’s Becca Smaellie. Sammi

Oblad (CJ) finished second, fol-lowed by Kenzie Moon (Ex), Abby Webber (T) and Tiffany Bird (T).

Clarke Johnsen’s Sam Garcia also broke three records on Monday. He broke the one min-ute mark in the 400 run with a 58.19 time. That broke Luke Jones’ (CJ-2008) record. He also captured the 1600 record with a 5:03.51 time, breaking Benton Tripp’s (G) record from 2008.

Garcia’s teammate Caleb Anderson finished second in the 400, followed by three Tooele runners with Garett Southerland, Payton Baker and Manuel Mora coming in third, fourth and fifth place. Gavin Eyre (G), Micah Douglas (T) and Zach Wendel (G) finished sixth, seventh and eighth.

Following Garcia in the 1600 run was Southerland (T), Scott Ruebush (CJ), Zach Barrett (T), Tanner Linares (G), Royal Reed (T), Jake Orosco (CJ) and Justin Putter (CJ).

In the girls’ 400, Tooele’s Lewis captured the title. Taryn Wolfe (CJ) captured second place with Halee Deavilla (Ex) and Ivy Begay (G) tying for third. Emily Webber (T) came in fifth while Amanda Murphy (W), Sydney Naylor (T) and Mckayla Peterson (G) fin-ished sixth, seventh and eighth place, respectively.

Clarke Johnsen’s Kass Loertscher won the 800 run in record time, edging Kendall Bell (Ex) in a close finish. Shelbie Shepherd (CJ) came in third, followed by Begay (G), Marissa Linares (G), Carli Christensen (G), Naylor (T) and Peterson (G).

In another close 800 finish, Joe Zeller (CJ) crossed the fin-ish line just ahead of McCoy Diderickson (G) for first. Third place went to Dawson Vorwaller (T) and Clayton Stanworth (G), Blayke White (CJ), Jake Drasco

(CJ), Shaden Lazenby (G) and Ruebush (CJ) placed fourth through eighth, respectively.

Madison Emmett of Clarke Johnsen won the girls’ 1600 run with two Excelsior runners, Bell and Mikelle Rogers coming in second and third. Fourth place went to McKinnly Williams (G) with Peterson (G), Catherine Velez (T), Patricia Sameniego (T) and Rachelle Haskell (T) finish-ing fifth through eighth.

Two Tooele girls place first and second in the long jump. Tiffany Bird edged out Hannah Strege for the title, tying Madison Alvey’s (CJ-2010) meet record of 14’ 4”. Third went to Lily Thomas (CJ) with Oblad coming in fourth. Moon (Ex), Rylie Ekins (G), E. Webber (T) and Rogers (Ex) fin-ished out the scoring places.

Powers (T) and Pollman (T) tied in the long jump with a 16’ 11” jump. Since Powers had the second longest jump, he was declared the winner of the tie breaker, putting Pollman in sec-ond place. Soltes (G) came in third place, one inch behind the leaders. Dakota Galvin (T) and Delmuro (W) tied for fourth with Castleton (CJ) and Jacob Thurgood (T) finishing sixth and seventh. Saxon Stringham (CJ) and Isaiah Cole (Ex) tied for eighth place.

Tooele’s Kamryn Grover threw the shot put 26’ 2” to capture first. The oldest standing district record, set in 2007, is the girls’ shot put, held by Tooele’s Rylee Mulitalo at 33’ 3.5”. Reannon Justice (G) grabbed second and Kayla Moyle (Ex) came in third. Braylee Crosman (G), Emma Hiss (T), Kioa (CJ), Rayah Nielson (T) and Shilaya Grange (G) placed finished out the placing.

In the boy’s shot put, Clarke Johnsen’s French broke the meet

14 records broken at junior high meetSUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO

Tooele County junior high runners explode out of the blocks at the 200-meter race Monday morning at Stansbury High School. Fourteen records were broken at the annual meet.

SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO

Kenzie Moon of Excelsior Academy runs hurdles at the Junior High Track Meet Monday morning at Stansbury High School. Moon finished second in the 300 hurdles.

SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB FILE PHOTO

Stansbury sophomore pitcher Kimbri Herring unleashes a pitch against Hurricane on May 11. Herring finished the season with a 17-2 record.

Mark WatsonSPORTS EDITOR

SEE TRACK PAGE A11 ➤

A10 SPORTSA10 SPORTS

THURSDAY May 23, 2013 A11TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

record with a heave of 39’ 9”, breaking Tony Leakehe’s (T-2010) throw of 38’ 10”. Coming in second and third were Tooele’s Merino and Paystrup. Fourth place went to Steven Havili (CJ), with fifth going to Josh Armstrong (T). Josh Witkowski (Ex) earned a sixth and Wendover’s Alex Ruiz grabbed a seventh. Jaden Dare (T) finished in eighth place.

Four of the six relay races had meet records broken. Three Clarke Johnsen relay teams set records. Garcia was in on his third record setting performance when he ran the final leg of the boys 4 X 400 relay. Knocking off more than three seconds, Caleb Anderson, Joe Davis, Castleton and Garcia finished in 4:11.00 to beat the Tooele A team by 13 sec-onds. The Tooele B team finished third, followed by Grantsville, and two Excelsior relay teams.

The girls 4 X 400 was won by the Tooele A team of Raegen Root, E. Webber, A. Webber and Lewis. Clarke Johnsen A team finished second and the Clarke Johnsen B team grabbed third. Excelsior came in fourth, fol-lowed by Grantsville A, Tooele B and Grantsville B.

The Clarke Johnsen girls 1600 medley B relay team broke the mark set by Tooele in 2011 with a time of 5:15.37. Oblad, Mckinley Peck, Wihongi and Sydney Barton edged Excelsior Academy, who came in second just under four seconds behind the winners. Third was captured by Clarke Johnsen’s A team. Tooele’s A and B teams came in fourth and fifth with Grantsville’s A and B teams

coming in sixth and seventh.The Clarke Johnsen boys’ 1600

medley team also broke the meet record, knocking off five seconds and finishing in 4:22.63. That time broke the record of 4:27.52 held by Tooele since 2011. Havili, Stringham, Caleb Anderson and Zeller brought home the gold, edging the Tooele A team for first. Tooele’s B team followed in third with Grantsville’s A and B teams coming in fourth and fifth. Excelsior followed in sixth and the Clarke Johnsen B team earned seventh.

Tooele’s boys and girls sprint relay teams (4 X 100) both cap-tured first, with the boys’ team of Smith, Paystrup, Powers and Borders breaking the meet record of 50.00 (G-2010) with a 48.41 time. It was also Smith’s fourth first place finish at the meet. Clarke Johnsen A team came in second with Tooele’s B team following in third. Excelsior Academy finished in fourth and Wendover A and B teams came in fifth and sixth. Grantsville B finished seventh and Excelsior B came in eighth.

Tooele’s Banks, Lewis, DeSantiego and Strege led the girls’ 4 X 100 relay to the title. Clarke Johnsen A and B came in second and third; Excelsior, fourth; Tooele B, fifth, and Grantsville A and B teams fin-ished in sixth and seventh.

The meet proved to be a suc-cessful event as Excelsior com-peted for the first time and the total number of athletes has grown over the years. Several events had over 20 participants competing. Volunteers from Stansbury High, as well as dis-trict high school track coaches and others helped make the meet run smoothly throughout

the day. Ribbons were given to the top three place winners in each event and Tooele Jr. High will be keeping the boys’ and girls’ traveling team trophies again until next year’s eighth annual meet.

Trackcontinued from page A10

SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO

Kendal Bell and Kassidy Loertscher battle to the finish line of the girls 800-meter race Monday morning at the Junior High Track Meet.

by Richard BriggsSTAFF WRITER

The Tooele High School boys and girls tennis teams will be hosting a camp for children in second through ninth grade next week.

As part of a fundraising effort for the teams, the coaches and players of the teams will host the camp for the purpose of teaching future players the basics of the game.

“First of all, we try to get them used to the ball and the tennis rackets,” said Terry Weddle, head coach of the THS girls tennis team. “We want to help them bal-ance the tennis racket and the ball.”

Once the children receive the basics of balance, they’ll then be taught footwork, and hitting drills with the forehand and backhand.

“It gives them exposure to ten-nis and what it’s all about,” said Lyle Nielson, THS boys tennis coach. “It gives kids exposure to new things.”

Nielson said taking part in sports in general is good for building up young people and helps them have an enjoyable high school experience once they get to that age.

The children who attend the camp will be divided according to skill level so that they can receive individualized instruction from current members of the two THS tennis teams.

“It depends on the kids,” Weddle said. “We try and watch for that. We’ll separate and work with them one-on-one.”

Weddle said the camp is also a

good learning experience for the high school players, as they get a chance to share their knowledge of the game with younger play-ers.

“It gives the high school kids a feeling of accomplishment,” he said. “Any time you can get them down there it helps. It’s a good strength for them.”

Nielson said the experience the varsity players receive in giving instruction pays off in their own progress.

“It gives the high school players a sense of community,” Nielson said. “It also helps them see things they need to work on in their own game.”

Weddle said more interest about the camp has grown each year, and it’s a good cause to

help the THS boys and girls ten-nis teams. All the money earned from the camp will go toward the programs for travel costs and uni-forms.

The tennis camp takes place from Tuesday until Friday, May 31. The cost of the camp is $30 per person with a family discount of $25 for every child after that in a family.

Nielson joins Weddle, along with the varsity players from the boys and girls tennis teams, to give instruction during the camp. They have asked that all par-ticipants bring their own tennis rackets and wear proper athletic clothing, including tennis shoes.

For any additional informa-tion, contact Nielson at (541) 274-0290 or contact Weddle

at (435) 841-7735. You can also contact both coaches by email at [email protected] or [email protected].

Following next week’s camp, Nielson and Weddle will hold other classes for players who want to sharpen their tennis skills. Those classes will be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays dur-ing June and July from 9 a.m. until 11 a.m. Also, every Thursday night is an open tennis night at the THS tennis courts for people to come [email protected]

Basics to be taught at THS tennis camp

MAEGAN BURR/TTB FILE PHOTO

Tooele High School third singles player Kole Carberry returns the ball against Grantsville on April 9. The THS tennis players will be at the tennis camp next week to give instruction with the coaches.

Transcript Cup 2012-2013

Teams GHS SHS THS

Football 2 3 1

Girls Soccer 1 3 2

Girls Tennis 3 2 1

Boys Golf 1 3 2

Volleyball 1 3 2

Girls Cross Country 2 3 1

Boys Cross Country 2 3 1

Fall Total 12 20 10

Boys Basketball 2 2 2

Girls Basketball 1 3 2

Wrestling 1 2 3

Boys Swimming 1 2 3

Girls Swimming 1 2 3

Drill Team 1 3 2

Winter Total 7 14 15

Baseball 2 3 1

Softball 2 3 1

Boys Soccer 1 3 2

Boys Tennis 3 2 1

Boys Track & Field 2 3 1

Girls Track & Field 1 3 2

Girls Golf 1 2 3

Spring Total 12 19 11

Grand Total 31 53 36

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HometownB1THURSDAY May 23, 2013

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.

T he punches kept coming. Left, right, uppercut, jab. He never knew

from which direction they’d fly. He kept his fists up, his eyes on his opponent, and then for a split second, let his guard down. That’s when everything changed.

Jared Garbett, of Tooele,

let his guard down for just a moment while boxing with friends and took a hit to the face that knocked him out. The brain injury the 17-year-old received due to the fall was serious enough that he was not expect-ed to live through it, much less recover without life-altering brain damage.

“He stumbled in a circle, fell

and hit his head on the cement,” said his mother, Michelle Garbett, in a blog used to update friends and family on Jared’s condition.

That was Jan. 31, 2011. At the time, Jared was a 14-year-old high school freshman living in St. George with his parents, Michelle and Lee Garbett. They had relocated from Tooele to St.

George just weeks before the boxing accident that caused his brain injury. They have since moved back to Tooele.

The first prognosis was grim.“He was considered non-via-

ble on scene,” Michelle said.She arrived at the hospital

shortly after the ambulance, but

Tooele teen and his family recount the accident and miraculous recovery that changed their lives

Jared Garbett at Spencer Park in Tooele. Garbett enjoys playing basketball with his friends.

Tooele teen and his family recount the accident and miraculous recovery that changed their lives

MiracleNOTHING SHORT

OF A

STORY COLLETT

LITCHARD

SEE MIRACLE PAGE B10 ➤

“I’M MORE HAPPY AND POSITIVE. I’M MORE THANKFUL FOR MY LIFE.”

JARED GARBETT

• Bulletin Board

• Weddings, Missionary, Birthday, Military

DAVID BERN

B10B10HOMETOWN B1HOMETOWN B1

THURSDAY May 23, 2013B2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

PIONEER PROSE

Come take a walk with me back in time along a trail less traveled.

In pioneer days, much of the burden fell upon women in the companies. Much preparation was needed before leaving for the new frontier. Among these tasks was providing enough bedding to last for several years

after arrival in the West. Quilts made and taken on the journey were worn out after years of use. However, some quilts did survive the trip and those tell a story. Some were friendship quilts, helping to ease separation from loved ones and serving as a remembrance of dear ones left behind.

Sewing and quilting was high on the list of things to do before leaving on the journey. Packing sewing and quilting supplies and as much extra material as pos-sible was important. Very special quilts were packed with china or in a trunk while everyday quilts were left out for bedding. Other uses were padding on a seat on the wagon. When dust storms blew across the plains, quilts were used to cover any openings in the wagon covers. In some cases, during Indian attacks, quilts were hung on the outside wagon covers for protec-tion. New babies were wrapped in quilts and during rain storms quilts were used to stem the flow of water running through the wagon covers. After death, the body was wrapped in a quilt and buried, giving a grieving family comfort that their loved one was enfolded in a lovingly handmade

quilt from home. Upon arrival at their destina-

tion, quilts were again found useful. They were used for cover-ing up windows cut into cabins where there was no glass and doorways of cabins or dugouts.

Placing a favorite quilt from home on the bed in a rough-hewn cabin gave a bit of beauty and a connection of her former life to a pioneer woman. Chores were many and pioneer women didn’t have free time. Instead, included in their daily and evening activities, was piecing or sewing a quilt. Often it took months before its completion, but knowing it would eventually be finished helped. One lady wrote in her journal that while she and her husband lived in a dugout there was a terrible storm that raged for days, and if it hadn’t been for her quilt pieces she had to work on, she felt she would have lost her mind.

Scraps of clothing were care-fully saved and later put into quilts. A pioneer journal records that a woman had a quilt of rags she had kept from worn out clothing that belonged to her and her family. Each rag told a story of dates and places the family had been, and she began putting them into a quilt. As she pieced the quilt together through the years, her quilt became a tribute to her family and was considered an heirloom long after her death.

Another lady made an album

quilt, sewing names of her chil-dren and grandchildren with their birth dates and wedding dates on it. Symbols that had sentimental value to the maker were many, such as a pine tree representing fidelity and bold-ness, everlasting life and stabil-ity. A pineapple meant hospital-ity. A rose represented love.

During the Civil War era, women made quilts for the pur-pose to signal escaping slaves. The Civil War era included the American Abolition Movement from 1830 through 1880.

During events before the war, there are intriguing stories of how quilting was used to help slaves escape through the Underground Railroad. A log cabin quilt hung in the window with a black center for the chim-ney was said to indicate a safe house or how to get to safety in a new land. A variation of Jacob’s Ladder gave clues on how to get to that new land during their flight to freedom.

When war broke out, women rallied to help make money for the cause. Women of the South held fairs and bazaars where they sold quilts and other sewn items. Raising money to help buy supplies for the Union, it was later decided to buy medical supplies for the soldiers.

As the Civil War lasted more than four years, the soldiers were becoming increasingly desperate for clothing and blankets. Family quilts were donated at first,

and then the military requested quilts be made. Many quilts were cut up and sewn into cot quilts. Money had to be raised to fur-nish fabric to make the soldiers’ bedding as existing material was used up. It was estimated that more than 250,000 quilts and comforters had been made for the Union soldiers.

Southern women were hin-dered in producing bedding for their soldiers because they had no tradition of sewing for causes and the wealthier women had slaves do the everyday sew-ing. Nevertheless, these ladies learned to sew and pitched in to help their soldiers. Calico was said to cost as much as $25 a yard at the end of the war. Old mattresses were torn apart for fiber to spin. Carpets were cut up and made into blankets for the soldiers.

Very few of the quilts made for the soldiers have survived. Most were worn out and many sol-diers were buried in their quilts. However, the Tooele County Daughters of Utah Pioneers Museum, 55 E. Vine St. in Tooele, houses several pioneer quilts dating from the early years of Tooele Valley settlement.

Patricia Holden is the pub-licist for the Tooele County Company of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers. She is also a member of the DUP SheepRock Camp. She can be reached at [email protected].

Stories of the past sewn into pioneer quiltsPatricia HoldenGUEST COLUMNIST

COMMUNITY NEWSCommunity invited to DUP Jubilee on June 1

The Tooele County Daughters of Utah Pioneers is holding its annual jubilee on June 1 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Tooele Pioneer Museum Complex, 55 E. Vine St. in Tooele.

Come visit the museum com-plex and view artifacts from another century. The new Tooele County Daughters of Utah Pioneers History book will be available.

Lovely hand sewn aprons, hot pads, scarves, afghans, dish towels, and baby clothes with crocheted hats fill the gift shop. Pioneer children’s games such as whistles, marbles and others will also be there.

There will also be a bake sale with home-baked goods pro-vided by Tooele County’s best cooks. All proceeds from the bake sale will go for the repair of the old pioneer city hall building. It was built in 1967 and houses the Tooele County Daughters of Utah Pioneers Museum. Bring your checkbook and your gen-erosity.

Take a tour of the museum complex and get a map of points of interest throughout Tooele City and the surrounding area.

Plan to also visit the Tooele Valley Railroad Museum where you will see an 1800s-era steam engine. The Donner Reed Museum and J. Rueben Clark Museum will both be open in Grantsville, and a mining muse-um and early artifacts of the area will be open in Stockton.

The Tooele Quilt Guild will be present at the museum complex, where they will provide displays of original quilts and a gift bou-tique. All proceeds from the bou-tique will go to the Children’s Justice Center.

POETRY

Laura Dimmit is from Joplin, Missouri, and her family survived the fierce

tornado of May, 2011. The entire area was strewn with debris, and here’s a poem about just one little piece that fell from the sky.

School photo, found after the Joplin tornado

“Joey, 4th grade, 1992”

He’s been on the fridge since it happened,

sneaking glances from under-neath the cat

magnet at our dinners, coffee habits, arguments.

We posted him on the database of items found,

hoping that someone would rec-ognize his messy

hair, Batman t-shirt, blue eyes, but no one

answered the post or claimed him.

Somewhere a childhood photo album is not

quite complete, or a grandmoth-er’s mantelpiece;

an uncle’s wallet. One afternoon I got restless,

flipped through my old year-books, trying to find him,

looking to see how he might have aged: did he lose

the chubby cheeks? dye his hair? how long

did he have to wear braces? But he’s too young

to have passed me in the halls, the picture just

a stranger, a small reminder of the whirling aftermath

when Joplin was clutching at scraps: everything displaced,

even this poor kid who doesn’t even know he’s lost.

American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoun-dation.org), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2012 by Laura Dimmit, and reprinted by permission of the poet. Introduction copyright © 2013 by The Poetry Foundation. We do not accept unsolicited manu-scripts.

‘School photo, found after the Joplin tornado’Ted Kooser

U.S. POET LAUREATE, 2004-2006

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Starting salary $12-$13 per hr., depending upon experience.

Please email your resume [email protected] by June 2, 2013

APPLICANTS MUST HAVE:• experience with QuickBooks Version 2009 or higher• experience with Microsoft Word and Excel• knowledge of basic accounting rules• experience with email communication & website management• excellent interpersonal, oral and written communication skills• a positive disposition.• experience with office management protocols

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THURSDAY May 23, 2013 B3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

TECH GURU

Windows 8 uses a new reader to open PDF files instead of the

Adobe Reader we have been accustomed to for many years. It is a little different to use, especially when you need to copy and print your PDF docu-ment. Here is how to find these options.

Turn on your computer and from your colorful Start screen, right-click your mouse anywhere and then click the “All apps” button down in the lower-right corner. When the new window opens, you will see a list of all the applications installed on your computer. Find the icon “Reader” and click it once to open.

If you have opened any PDF documents prior to this, they may be listed here and you can click any one of these to open. If you haven’t opened any PDF documents, click the orange

“Browse” box. Locate any PDF document on

your computer and then click it once to open. Once it is open, right-click the document and a menu bar will appear at the bot-tom. Here you are given numer-ous options to choose from. One of the most popular is the Print button. Click “Print” to open up a list of available printers.

You can also click the “More” button and then click “Info.” Here you can see when the docu-ment was created and the size, and also what permissions are allowed. Click the “More” button again and click “Close file” to close the document.

If you find this change too

foreign for you and you want to have Adobe Reader to view your PDF documents again, go to Adobe.com, click the “Download” button at the top and click “Get Adobe Reader.” Follow the instructions to install and then reboot your computer once it is complete. There is one more step so Adobe Reader opens your PDF documents instead of the integrated reader.

We need to change the default program for opening your PDF documents. This is only if you want to have Adobe Reader opening your documents again and you have already installed Adobe Reader.

From your “Start” screen, click your “Desktop” tile. Next, in the Taskbar at the bottom, click “File Explorer,” which is the yellow folder formerly called “Windows Explorer.” When it opens, double-click the “Documents” library. Now, locate any PDF file

in your Documents library.Look under the Type column

for a PDF file and right-click it. From the pop-up menu, click “Open With.” Now a small box will open. If you do not see “Adobe Reader” listed, click “More options.” Checkmark “Use this app for all .pdf files,” and then click the Adobe Reader icon. All PDF files should open using Adobe Reader now.

You can reverse this by chang-ing back the default program for opening PDF files. Just follow the instructions above, select-ing “Reader” as the app to use to always open PDF files.

Scott Lindsay actively promotes learning the computer, regard-less of age, to better one’s life and circumstances and has helped thousands of people over the past 12 years to become better com-puter users. He can be reached at [email protected].

Windows 8 comes with own reader for PDF docs

Scott LindsayGUEST COLUMNIST

BOOKWORM

GRANTSVILLE MAYOR AWARDS

COURTESY OF JUSTIN WINGFIELD

Pictured above are the recipients of the Grantsville Mayor’s Community Youth Recognition Awards for the month of May. Pictured from left are Tegan Steinfeldt, Rob Lehman, Taylor Orgill and Grantsville City Mayor Brent Marshall.

Life is challenging for every-one in different ways. In “The Still Point of the

Turning World,” author Emily Rapp faces the unfathomable challenge of confronting her first and only child’s diagnosis of Tay-Sachs disease — a rare and always-fatal illness — when he was only 9 months old. As she and her husband helplessly witness the life-limiting disease take over their son’s body, they are forced to re-evaluate every-thing they thought they knew about parenting.

Rapp writes eloquently about trying to find meaning in her family’s situation and accepting the fact that she must live and mother in the present, because that’s all she and her young son have. She seeks solace wherever she can find it: in literature, in religion and with family and friends who literally hold her up during her darkest, most incon-solable days.

Drawing inspiration from a broad range of thinkers, writ-ers and poets, Rapp tries to embrace what wisdom she can gain from caring for a child whom she knows she will inevitably outlive. Her parent-

ing mandate is simple and yet impossible: “to go with him as far as I could along this journey we call life, to be with him as deeply as I could from moment to moment and then let him go.”

This is the story of Rapp’s ongoing journey through grief, from the panic and mania of her

anticipatory grief to the deep sadness, emptiness and longing that her son’s death will cause. It is not an easy memoir to read, but Rapp writes with such raw honesty and emotion that read-ers are compelled to stick with it.

Rapp somehow manages to uplift readers with her indomita-ble spirit and the sheer power of a “dragon mother’s love.” This is a mother’s love story to her little boy, who will have been fully loved from his first breath to his last and long thereafter.

‘The Still Point of the Turning World’

“The Still Point of the Turning World”by Emily Rapp(Penguin Press)

Reviewed by Rose M. Croke

If it happens here, read about it here.

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Allergy & SinusVoice Disorders

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Book by: Richard

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Music & Lyrics by:Meredith

Willson

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THE UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN is presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International (MTI). All authorized performance materials are also supplied by MTI.

421 West 54th Street, New York, NY 10019 Phone: 212-541-4684 Fax: 212-397-4684 www.MTIShows.com

Radiant Body Intensive: Transform Your Body,

Mind and LifeMind and Life

4-week course starts June 4th in Tooele

$50 discount for registration by May 21stwww.radianceyoga.org/events

or 801-599-8222

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ANSWERS ON B9

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): Take care of your health and your reputation. Proper diet and a positive outlook will make a dif-ference that can lead to greater earning capacity. ★★★

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Do your best to pick up knowl-edge, skills and experience. Show what you have to offer and share ideas and solutions with others. ★★★★★

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don’t give in to temptation or excess. Consider your options and choose how you move forward based on common sense and maintaining your reputation. ★★

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Take responsibility for what you do and say. Rumors can affect your reputation and impulsive decisions could set you on a course that is irreversible. ★★

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Size up your situation before you say yes to something that may cause controversy. Don’t ignore your responsibilities or complaints will bombard you. ★★★★

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Observe what everyone around you is doing. Don’t let your emo-tions come between you and rea-son. Take a course or develop a new skill that will help you utilize your talents in new ways. ★★★

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Keep your standards high and be precise. Honesty and integrity will be a must if you want to avoid an unpleasant situation. ★★★

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Domestic improvements can turn into a costly affair if you don’t do your research. Renovating or moving can be good for the soul, but it may not be good for the pocketbook. ★★★

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Start the process if you wish to make a personal or profes-sional change. Evening plans should include romance. ★★★★

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Follow through with your plans, but don’t push others to tag along. A last-minute change of plans must not daunt you. Follow through and enjoy your day. ★★

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Don’t question what everyone else is doing. Stick to whatever is on your agenda and do the best you can to finish what you start. ★★★

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Don’t let ego or a difficult rela-tionship cause you to miss out on something you’ve always wanted to do. You must separate what’s possible from what’s not and build your plan for the future based on reality. ★★★

Horoscopeby Eugenia Last

Universal Crossword

COMPLETELY COMPLETE By Rob Lee

ACROSS 1 Goya’s love,

the Duchess of ___

5 High-pitched flutes

10 Cradle call14 Organic

necklaces15 Resembling

a ram16 Kind of

thermometer17 Best parts

of a film?20 First, as

a voyage21 About in

the morning22 “That was

a long time ___”

24 Moo chew?25 Part of

many a discount store’s name

27 Horror director Roth

28 “Grand” Dam

30 Ethnic round dance

31 “Clemente” or “Mateo” lead-in

32 Shopping bag

33 Matches sound to picture

35 With 75 percent of a round trip completed

39 Another name for jai alai

40 Dastardly doings

43 Impede (with “down”)

46 Smart-alecky

47 Shrinks away

49 Grp. concerned with defense

50 Bighorn breeder

51 Sighs of relief

52 Composer Rorem or actor Romero

53 Man on a mission?

55 Supposed protective charm

57 Inventor’s pride and joy

62 Salacious glance

63 Coral ring64 Open-

mouthed stare

65 Michael who wrote “The Nev-erending Story”

66 Krypton and methane

67 Distinctive and stylish elegance

DOWN 1 Vestment

for Father Brown

2 Bruce or Spike

3 Secret-keeper’s liability

4 Java can be found in it

5 Chafing-dish dish

6 Like some hallowed halls

7 “Huckle-berry ___”

8 Twin with a connection

9 Bering or Barents, e.g.

10 Stylish British teens in the ’60s

11 Mountain ridges

12 Capital of the Philippines

13 Buzz in space

18 Opposite of naughty

19 Southwest-ern Native Americans

22 Work as a thespian

23 Baby syllable

25 “War and Peace” character

26 Bridge or foot feature

29 “Able to ___ tall buildings ... ”

30 Not one of the Hiltons

33 Affirmed solemnly

34 Small Eurasian duck

36 Outcasts, once

37 Took to the air

38 Certain to happen

41 Feeling of fury

42 Hallucina-tory drug

43 Mystify44 Conan

of TV talk45 Put on

weight47 Boorish

fellows48 Scandina-

vian seaport51 Enough

and then some

54 “Billion” extension

55 Commotions56 Cutting part58 Woman

on a broomstick

59 Airport posting (Abbr.)

60 Professional no. cruncher

61 Blair’s old house number

Edited by Timothy E. Parker May 20, 2013

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 May 23, 2013B4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

B4 COMICSB4 COMICS

THURSDAY May 23, 2013 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN B5

MILITARY

BIRTHDAY

WEDDINGSHanson/Young

Samantha Hanson and Shawn Richard Young have chosen May 25 as the day they will be joined in marriage. A celebration will be held in their honor that evening. Parents of the bride are Chris and Evon Hanson of Stansbury Park. Parents of the groom are Richard and Janae Young of Grantsville.

MISSIONARYWinn/Wood

Tyler and Debbie Winn are pleased to announce the mar-riage of their son, Daniel, to Mallory Wood, daughter of Michael and Tonya Wood. They were married May 17 in the Brigham City Temple. An open house will be held in their honor on May 24 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. in Tooele at the LDS 4th-14th Ward building located at 192 W. 200 South in Tooele. Daniel and Mallory will make their home in Tooele.

Dakota Maxfield

Air Force Airman Dakota B. Maxfield graduated from basic military training at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, San Antonio, Texas. The airman completed an intensive, eight-week pro-gram that included training in military discipline and studies, Air Force core values, physical

fitness, and basic warfare prin-ciples and skills. Airmen who complete basic training earn four credits toward an associ-ate in applied science degree through the Community College of the Air Force. Maxfield earned distinction as an honor graduate. He is the son of Sindy and Trent Maxfield of Tooele. The airman is a 2012 graduate of Tooele High School.

Elder Matthew Jones

Elder Matthew Wayne Jones will return home May 24 after serving an honorable mis-sion for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Oklahoma Tulsa Mission. Elder Jones will be speaking in the Tooele 14th Ward sacrament meeting, 192 W. 200 South in Tooele, on May 26 at 1 p.m. Elder Jones is the son of Robert and Sherry Jones.

Colleen Bennion

Colleen Bennion will celebrate her 80th birthday on May 25, over Memorial Day weekend. Colleen’s children and grandchil-dren cordially invite family and friends to celebrate her life at an open house given in her honor at the Tooele Stake Center, 253 S. 200 East, from 5 to 7 p.m. Colleen was born on May 8, 1933 to Weldo Dee and Lucille Riddle in Copperfield, Bingham Canyon, Utah. She married Rex Palmer Bennion on Jan. 26, 1951 in the Salt Lake Temple for time and all eternity. They have been happily married for 62 years. She is the mother of four children, daugh-ters Christi Cluff from Safford, Ariz.; Cindy Hollar and Sharon Spence from Tooele; and son Gary Bennion from West Jordan. Colleen is the proud grandmoth-

er of 26 grandchildren and 34 great-grandchildren, with four more great-grandchildren on the way. Your presence at this celebration is her gift. No gifts, please.

Daniel Winn and Mallory Wood

Shawn Young and Samantha Hanson

FINANCIAL FOCUS

Social Security provides retirement income you can’t outlive.

And, in addition to your own benefits, your spouse may be eligible to receive benefits based on your earnings record in the form of spousal benefits and survivor’s benefits. It’s easy to see why Social Security is an important source of retirement income.

However, according to the Social Security Administration, only about 40 percent of an average worker’s pre-retirement income is replaced by Social Security. When trying to figure out how you’ll meet your retire-ment income needs, you’ll prob-ably have to coordinate your Social Security benefits with other retirement income sources such as pensions, qualified retirement accounts and other personal savings.Factors to consider

How you incorporate Social Security benefits into your total retirement income plan may depend on a number of factors, including whether you’re mar-ried, your health and life expec-tancy, whether you (or your spouse) will work during retire-ment, the amount of your Social Security benefit (and that of your spouse, if applicable), other sources of retirement income (like a pension), how much retirement savings you have,

and, of course, your retirement income needs of you and your spouse, including the income needs of your spouse after your death.

A factor to consider is that Social Security has a “built-in” protection against longevity risk. Benefits increase each year you delay starting benefits through age 69. Benefits do not increase past age 70. The later you start receiving benefits, the greater the benefit amount. In addi-tion, Social Security benefits are inflation-protected, and may increase with annual cost-of-living adjustments based on increases in the Consumer Price Index.

How much you may pay in income tax may also factor into your retirement income plan. For example, distributions from tax-qualified accounts are generally taxed as ordinary income. Up to 85 percent of your Social Security benefits may also be taxed, depend-ing on your modified adjusted gross income and tax filing sta-tus. Tax issues are complex, so you should talk to a tax adviser to understand your options

and the tax consequences.Pensions

If you’re lucky enough to have a traditional employer pension available, that’s another reliable source of income. You’ll want to be sure that you effectively coordinate your Social Security benefits with pension income. Your pension may increase in value based on your age and years of employment, but it may not include cost-of-living adjust-ments. As mentioned earlier, Social Security not only increas-es the longer you delay taking benefits, but it may increase with COLAs.

If your pension benefit increases past the age at which you retire, you might consider waiting to take your pension in order to maximize your pension benefit amount. Depending on your income needs, you could start Social Security benefits earlier to provide income. Or, if you’ve already reached your maximum pension benefit, you could start your pension first, and defer Social Security in order to receive an increased monthly benefit later. Your deci-sion depends on your individual situation, including your pen-sion benefit amount and wheth-er it increases in value after you retire, and the pension options that are available to you. You can get an explanation of your pension options prior to retire-

ment from your pension plan, including the relative values of any optional forms of benefit available to you.Personal savings

Prior to retirement, when it came to personal savings, your focus was probably on accumu-lation - building as large a nest egg as possible. As you transi-tion into retirement, that focus changes. Rather than concen-trating on accumulation, you’re going to need to look at your personal savings in terms of dis-tribution and income potential. Your savings potentially can pro-vide a source of income to help you bridge any gap between the time you begin retirement and the time you wait to begin tak-ing Social Security benefits.

One option you might con-sider, depending on the amount of retirement savings you have and your income needs, is tak-ing some of your savings and purchasing an immediate annu-ity, which will provide a guaran-teed (based on the claims-pay-ing ability of the annuity issuer) income stream. In this way, your remaining savings may have a chance to increase in value, while delaying Social Security benefits increases your annual benefit as well.

Incorporating Social Security into your retirement income plan involves several other important factors. Talk to your

financial professional for help in developing the best plan for you.

Bruce Wingrove is a financial adviser for Ameriprise Financial

Services, Inc. His office is in Salt Lake City, however, he regularly works in Tooele and Grantsville meeting clients at any of the three H&R Block tax offices.

Coordinating social security benefits with other retirement assets

Bruce WingroveGUEST COLUMNIST

SUMMER LUNCHSummer food service meals

will be available for children up to age 18 from May 28 to Aug. 9 at Harris Elementary (251 N. First St., Tooele) and Northlake Elementary (268 N. Coleman St., Tooele), and from June 8 to Aug. 9 at Anna Smith Elementary (741 N. Aria Blvd., Wendover). Meals will be provided Monday through Friday with the exception of July 4 and 5. Lunch is served from noon to 1 p.m. Adult meals are available for $2.90. Adults are not permitted to eat off of childrens’ trays.

Tuesday, May 28Cheeseburger, french fries,

carrots & celery, fruit & yogurt parfait, milk

Wednesday, May 29Chicken patty sandwich,

baked chips, peas & carrots, grapes, milk

Thursday, May 30Chicken fried steak, potatoes

& gravy, wheat rolls, mixed veg-gies, applesauce, milk

Friday, May 31Pizza, jicama & veggies,

orange smiles, cowboy cookie, milk

Menu subject to change with-out notice. This institution is an equal opportunity provider.

CELEBRATING AMERICA’SLOVE OF FOOD

Find it here every month in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin

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435-830-6977Debit/Credit cards accepted online.

No refunds will be given after June 17th, 2013.

TOOELE GRANTSVILLEMay 20: 6pm - 8pm May 28: 6pm - 8pm

June 3: 6pm - 8pm May 30: 6pm - 8pm

June 10: 6pm - 8pm

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THURSDAY May 23, 2013TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN THURSDAY May 23, 2013

by Jennifer Forker

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Three-D printing technology is a game changer in the arts and crafts world.

“It really takes the lid off of what’s possible,” says Andrej Suskavcevic, president and CEO of the Craft and Hobby Association, in Elmwood Park, N.J. “It seems to me it’ll provide a really good bridge between technology and hands-on crafting.”

Randy Sarafan, technology edi-tor at Instructables, a website for sharing do-it-yourself projects, calls 3-D printing “mind-blowing. And the technology is adapting, changing and growing so fast.”

Already, desktop 3-D printers can make doodads, such as plastic rings, figurines, and small gears and parts. Sarafan prints his own robotic parts. A colleague printed a record that plays music. There are umpteen projects for print-ing cell phone covers. You can find advanced DIY projects at Thingiverse, a digital design-shar-ing website, and at Instructables.

“In a way, this reverses the industrial revolution and takes it back to people building things in their own workshops,” says Ken Denmead, editorial director at Make magazine, which devoted its winter 2013 issue to 3-D printing.

At-home, desktop 3-D printers don’t print high-quality pieces, say the artists who play around with

them — not yet. Until they do, there also are companies willing to print your 3-D artwork or objects for you.

Joshua Harker is a sculptor whose most fantastical design ideas were locked in his imagi-nation until 3-D printing became accessible.

“I’ve been drawing literally for-ever,” says Harker, 43, of Chicago. “I wanted to develop the drawings I was doing three-dimensionally and there was absolutely no way to do it.”

With 3-D printing, he says, “there are all these possibilities to get my head around. There’s a lot of room to explore and it’s still exciting for me.”

Three-D printer machines build up layers of extruded material — mostly plastics but also ceramics, metals, even a wood filament — one thin layer at a time using CAD (computer-aided design) software. Larger, commercial machines actually have been around since the mid-1980s.

Tabletop machines, which print primarily in plastics, have dropped in price in recent years. They cost a few hundred dollars to several thousand. Some notable desktop brands are Makerbot, Deezmaker and Cubify.

Newcomers enter the scene rapidly, says Denmead. One is Printrbot, whose Printrbot Jr. is the smallest and — at $400 — least expensive 3-D printer on the

market, according to Make. The magazine’s reviews of more than a dozen 3-D printers are available at Makezine.com, as are tips on using CAD modeling software.

Or skip the machine and focus on the CAD software, modeling and tweaking your art or object for printing by one of the many 3-D printing services, such as Shapeways and Ponoko. A lot of the software, such as ReplicatorG, is free online.

This is the route many artists take.

“It’s a low-overhead way to run a business,” says Colleen Jordan of Atlanta, who makes 3-D-printed jewelry that she sells online at the Etsy.com store Wearable Planter, and through Fab.com.

Jordan, 25, who has a degree

in industrial design, designs a 3-D model in software such as SolidWorks or Rhino, then uploads the file to a printing service, often Shapeways. She warns that mod-eling software takes time and patience to learn, but otherwise the process is simple. She receives her finished pieces from the print-er in a few weeks.

Jordan couldn’t create her jew-elry by traditional means, which involve tens of thousands of dol-lars to create molds and other manufacturing startup costs.

“I spent $25,000 on printing last year,” she says. “If I were to put that into just making molds, I’d only have 30 products before ship-ping.”

Instead, she prints her jewelry — diminutive planters that can

hold tiny plant sprigs — only as needed.

Other artists echoed the cost savings of 3-D printing on demand, and say the medium will create opportunities for young designers and inventors.

Jessica Rosenkrantz, co-found-er and co-designer at Nervous System in Somerville, Mass., prints art, jewelry and housewares in sterling silver, stainless steel and nylon plastic at Shapeways.

“It’s the most affordable way to do it other than printing it your-self,” says Rosenkrantz, 30, not-ing that a desktop printer couldn’t manage her products’ intricate designs.

Desktop 3-D printers are good for messing around with and printing prototypes, says Jordan.

“It’s more of a toy than a tool. It’s a cool toy,” says Jordan about her Makerbot 3-D printer. “It’s kind of cool to have around.”

Denmead sees 3-D printers changing the way artists create, hobbyists build and homeowners tinker.

“We’re not going to need to send away for spare or replacement parts anymore,” says Denmead. “We’re going to be able to down-load a file from a company and fix the piece at home.”

Sarafan likewise predicts that users won’t need to understand 3-D design software to play in the medium, and they’ll be able to use apps to print from phones.

“It’s stuff like that that is going to revolutionize the way people think of this technology,” says Sarafan.

Exploring the artsy, fun side of 3-D printing technologyby Michele Kayal

ASSOCIATED PRESS

When salsa overtook ketchup as America’s favorite condiment in the 1990s you had to know that “taco night” wasn’t far behind.

Simple, satisfying and inex-pensive, hard or soft tacos filled with meat, cheese and a what-have-you of veggies have become a staple for busy families. Sales of taco shells, seasonings and other products have grown steadily over the last decade, says Juv Marchisio, senior marketing manager for B&G Foods, which owns the Ortega brand, and research suggests that roughly half of all Americans indulge in tacos at home.

And why not? Tacos offer com-munal family dining at its best: there’s no arguing or whining when can make it however they like it.

But the way many Americans approach tacos at home — ground beef, pre-shredded “Mexican” cheese, and that ubiquitous kit with shells and a flavor packet — could use a revamp. Sure, you can change it up with whole-wheat tacos. You can sneak black beans into the ground beef. You could even go the way of the spa-ghetti taco popularized by the tween TV show, “iCarly.”

But for advice on really taking your tacos to the next level, we turned to some innovative chefs and cookbook authors. Here are some of their most delicious and creative suggestions, no recipes needed.Persian-Inspired Tacos

Toss shredded chicken in a sauce of pomegranate molasses, lime juice and honey. Stuff the meat into a taco shell (or wrap it in a flour tortilla or even Middle Eastern flatbread) and top with yogurt, fresh basil, mint, scal-lions, tomato, cucumber and plenty of sumac.

“This is a classic combina-

tion of Persian ingredients,” Louisa Shafia, author of “The New Persian Kitchen,” wrote in an email. “Crushed purple sumac berries are tart and salty and a must have for conjuring the authentic flavor of Middle Eastern cuisine.” To go vegetar-ian, Shafia suggests substituting roasted eggplant for the chicken.Steak House Tacos

Season a flat-iron steak with salt and pepper, then sear it on the grill, suggests Washington, D.C. chef Spike Mendelsohn, who plans to open a steak frites restaurant called Bearnaise this summer. Wrap thin slices of the steak and pickled red onions inside a soft corn taco and serve with warm bearnaise sauce for dipping. “I love the idea of eat-ing a steak without sharpening my knives,” Mendelsohn said via email.Indian-Inspired Tacos, Two Ways

Spices like cumin, coriander and chilies are natural allies in both Mexican and Indian cui-sine, says Ali Loukzada, chef at New York’s Cafe Serai. So what could be more obvious than a chicken tikka taco drizzled with mint chutney? A palm’s worth of shredded cabbage or radish adds crunch.

“When you’re adapting Indian flavors to a Mexican dish, the original ingredients and tastes are still present,” Loukzada said

via email. “It’s more of an Indian tweak.”

To go completely native, ditch the taco shell for the crisp len-til-and-rice crepe called dosa. “I Indianize our taco fillings at home all the time,” Rohini Dey, owner of Vermillion restaurant in New York and Chicago, writes in an email. At her restaurants, Dey offers a dosa-taco bar, where Latin fillings such as anchovies, avocado, chorizo and Michoacan beef are offered alongside the spiced potato stuffing tradition-ally used in dosa.

Chutneys of mint, coconut and tamarind — typical Mexican as well as Indian flavors — line the toppings bar. “By confining the chili to the chutneys instead of the filling, it’s easy for the fam-ily to tailor to each person’s spice tolerance,” Dey writes.Pig-in-a-Taco

Stick a pork tenderloin in the slow cooker until it practically melts, suggests Marie Simmons, author of the new cookbook, “Taste of Honey.” Shred the meat, then toss it with a sweet-spicy barbecue sauce made by sim-mering honey, chipotle peppers packed in adobo sauce, ketchup, soy sauce, cumin, chili powder, garlic and a swig of cider vinegar for about 10 minutes, or until thick.

“I just love the deep, spicy taste of sticky glazed pork,” Simmons writes in an email. Top the taco

with avocado, thinly sliced rad-ishes and a shredded jicama-and-carrot slaw dressed with chopped cilantro and lime juice.California Vegetarian Tacos

Well, duh! No taco line up is complete without a recipe from California, the entry point of so much of the country’s Mexican culture.

Santa Barbara-based food and garden blogger Valerie Rice (Eat Drink Garden) uses lentils as the base for her taco, sim-mering them with tomato, garlic, red pepper, and a dash each of cumin and smoked paprika. The lentils get packaged in a soft corn tortilla and topped with items such as roasted tomatillo salsa and guacamole.

“My first go-round with these I wasn’t sure how it would go over with my meat-loving husband and sometimes picky daughters,” Rice wrote in an email. “But they were a total hit and now are part of our dinnertime rotation.”

Top chefs offer up fresh takes on taco nightB7B6

WEST ELEMENTARY WINNERS

COURTESY OF LESLIE TAYLOR

Congratulations to Gracie Mauchley and Makaylee Likens, who were finalists in the SunWise with SHADE poster contest. The contest was sponsored by the Huntsman Cancer Center to promote safety in the sun. The girls were the only finalists from Tooele. They are third grade students at West Elementary.

COURTESY OF LESLIE TAYLOR

Congratulations to the bike winners of West Elementary’s Ken Garff Road to Success reading program. As the students recorded reading minutes from home they were able to enter slips toward the bike drawing at the end of the year. The winners are, from left, Mikali Mesina, Bella Carson, Briana Ramirez-Diaz, Chief from the Utah Blaze, Ty Sutherland, Seth Valencia and Ryan Gardner.

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

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TooeleTooele tri sprint triathlonTooele City is excited to announce the first ever Tooele tri sprint triathlon. The race will be held June 29 at 7 a.m. at the Tooele City Pool Park. The race will feature a 5K run, 10-mile bike ride and a 400-yard swim. The registration fee is $25 and will include a race shirt if you register by May 24. For more informa-tion and to register, please visit www.tooelecity.org, email [email protected] or call 843-2142.

Tooele tri kid’s triathlonKid’s 12 and under start training today for the first ever Tooele tri kid’s triath-lon. The race will be held June 28 at 6 p.m. at the Tooele City Pool Park. There will be three different age groups. The registration fee is $10 for the first child and $5 for each additional child in the same family. Please register by June 14. For more information and to register, please visit www.tooelecity.org, email [email protected] or call 843-2142.

Miss Tooele CityTooele City is excited to announce that the 2013 Miss Tooele City Scholarship Pageant will again be held as part of the city’s Fourth of July festivities. This is for Tooele City residents, girls ages 16 to 24. There are $750 to $1,000 scholarships available, plus additional prizes. There is no swimsuit or fitness competition. The pageant will be held on July 1, but don’t delay, the application deadline is May 30. Applications and additional information are available on our website. Please visit www.tooelecity.org or contact Kami Perkins at 843-2105 or [email protected] for more information.

Free triathlon clinicTooele City and Live Fit Tooele County are sponsoring a free triathlon clinic on June 1 at 9 a.m. at the Pratt Aquatic Center, 55 N. 200 West in Tooele. This clinic will include information on transitions, pacing, mistakes to avoid, swim drills and much more. The clinic will be good for both kids and adults. If you would like to participate in the swim drills, please wear your swimsuit. Please contact Tooele City Parks and Recreation at 843-2142 or [email protected] for more info.

Summer CrazeTooele City Parks and Recreation and Tooele County 4-H would like to invite kids 6 years and older to participate in Summer Craze Adventures for kids. Adventures will be held on Tuesdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Swimming Pool Park from June 4 to July 30. The cost is $10 per adventure. You can choose to attend every week, or choose your favor-ite ones to attend. Space is limited. Register soon at Tooele City Hall. For more information, contact Tooele City Parks and Recreation at 843-2142 or [email protected]. A full class listing and registration forms are available at www.tooelecity.org.

Arts in the ParkKids of all ages are welcome to partici-pate in Arts in the Park, sponsored by the Tooele City Arts Council. Arts in the Park will be held on Thursdays through-out the summer at Swimming Pool Park. Projects range in cost from free to $5. You choose the projects you want to make. Space is limited. Pre-registration is required, and can be done at Tooele City Hall. For more information, contact the Tooele City Arts Council at 843-2142 or [email protected]. A full class listing and registration forms are available at www.tooelecity.org.

Children’s Fine Arts ClubTooele City Arts Council is sponsoring a Children’s Fine Arts Club. The club will be held on Tuesday afternoons from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. at Swimming Pool Park from June 4 to July 30. The club is for kids 8 years old and older. The cost is $25 per child. To register, come to Tooele City Hall. Space is lim-ited. For more information, contact the Tooele City Arts Council at 843-2142 or [email protected]. A full class listing and registration forms are available at www.tooelecity.org.

Friday at the parkJoin the Tooele City Family Recreation program each Friday from June 7 to August 2 for fun at parks throughout Tooele City. We will meet from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. each week. You bring your family and we will bring all the fun. There is no registration required for the program. Please remember that this is a family event. All youth must be accom-panied by an adult. A schedule for this program is available at www.tooelecity.org. For more information, contact Tooele City Parks and Recreation at 843-2142 or [email protected].

Family hikeTooele City Family Recreation invites families of all ages to participate in a family hike on June 10 at 7 p.m. in Settlement Canyon. This activity is free for families. Please remember that this is a family event. All youth must be accompanied by an adult. If you would like to participate in this activity, please pre-register by contacting Tooele City Parks and Recreation at 843-2142 or [email protected] no later than June 7 at 5 p.m.

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.

LibraryTooele City LibraryTuesdays, 11 a.m., Wiggle Worms (interactive story time for 1- to 2-year-old children); Wednesdays and Thursdays, 11 and 11:30 a.m., story time; Thursdays, 4 to 6 p.m., teen time with gaming, movies and more; Fridays, 3:30 to 5:30 p.m., kids crafts. May events: May 28, 1 p.m., family movie. May 30, 1 p.m., gardening for kids activity. May 28 to July 31, summer reading program. All month long, join the library’s online recipe club. This month, share your barbecue recipes.

Grantsville City LibraryThe 2013 Grantsville City Library Summer Reading Program is designed to create in your children a love of

books by encouraging them to develop a positive attitude about reading. Any child who reads, is read to, or listens to an audio book is encouraged to join the Summer Reading Program. Registration begins May 30 at the Grantsville City Library, 42 N. Bowery St. For more infor-mation, call 884-1670.

SchoolsGHS football meetingGrantsville High School is holding a foot-ball player and parent meeting on May 23 at 7 p.m. in the GHS auditorium for all those interested in playing football in ninth through 12th grade. See you there.

Preschool programThe preschool program in Tooele County School District has openings in their tuition classrooms for 3 and 4 year olds. We also do monthly assessments if you have concerns about your child’s development. Call 833-1966.

St. Marguerite registrationSt. Marguerite Catholic School is cur-rently registering for pre-kindergarten through eighth grade for the 2013-2014 school year. If you would like more information on tuition rates, please stop by the school or call and speak with Deanna at 882-0081.

Extended day programSt. Marguerite Catholic School is pleased to announce that we now offer an extended day program. Our program will run Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. There will be lots of fun activities for the kids as well as help with homework. Please call 882-0081 for more info.

Excelsior Academy toursCurious about charter schools? Want to know more about Excelsior Academy? Tours are held each Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. School tours cover a range of topics such as the Excelsior Academy Philosophy and Vision, Direct Instruction, CHAMPS and the character development program. There is also an opportunity to observe the school’s unique group settings. Come and tour the building and have any questions answered. Everyone is welcome, 124 E. Erda Way, Erda. 882-3062.

TATCSave the datePlease join us June 5 for our ribbon cutting and open house celebration. We invite all of Tooele County to come and celebrate the opening of your new technical college. This building has the latest energy saving technology, and is seeking Tooele County’s first LEED Silver rating. We look forward to a spectacular day of celebration with all of Tooele County starting at 11 a.m. with the ribbon cutting ceremony, followed by an open house from noon to 6 p.m. The new facility is located in Tooele City’s education corridor at 88 S. Tooele Blvd.

CNA classPrepare for a career in healthcare quick-ly and economically in TATC’s new state-of-the-art facility. Instructors provide hands-on personal training to ensure you become exceptional in your field. In addition, TATC assists all graduates with job placement in one of the many CNA job openings employers have. Call 248-1800 to reserve your seat.

From print to webNew class at the TATC. Learn Adobe CS6, WordPress and Adobe Creative Cloud in 16 weeks. This 100-hour series qualifies for the Custom Fit training pro-gram where employers can receive up to 50 percent in training costs. Register today by calling 248-1800 or visit parke-creative.com/teach for more info.

CharityBlood driveSt. Marguerite Catholic Church is hold-ing a blood drive on June 23 from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. in the social hall. To make an appointment, contact Jennie Rodriguez at (410) 533-5375. Walk-ins are also welcome.

Food driveJumpin’ Jack Splash is pleased to pres-ent the second annual open bounce and food drive to benefit the Tooele County Food Bank. Join us June 1 at the Dow James Building in Tooele from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. for what promises to be an afternoon of fun. There will be bounce houses, inflatable slides, an obstacle course, food, music and a raffle for your entertainment. The huge vendor area will be packed with local artisans, craft-ers and businesses for all your shopping needs. The cost of admission is only three cans of food or $3 per person. Come get your jump on and support your local food bank and the community. We are also in need of the following donations for the event: hot dogs, hot dog buns, snack-size packaged chips, canned soda and 200 pounds of bagged ice.

Writing volunteersValley Mental Health in Tooele, a non-profit organization, is looking for several volunteers with grant writing experience and/or computer/typing skills to per-form data entry at the Tooele office. Must pass a background check and be able to volunteer a few hours or more each week (can volunteer anytime Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.) Contact Alex C. Gonzalez or Adrienne Berrett at 843-3520.

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.

Moose LodgeMeals at the lodgeEffective May 31, Friday and Saturday night dinners will be served from 5 to 8 p.m. until further notice. Friday night din-ners include clam chowder and halibut, shrimp or chicken strip baskets. Costs are $10 for halibut or shrimp baskets with a cup of chowder and $7 for chick-en strips with a cup of chowder. A bowl of chowder is $4 and a cup of chowder is $2. Saturday night dinners include 16-ounce ribeye or T-bone steaks with your choice of baked potato or fries,

salad and a roll for $15. A halibut or salmon steak with your choice of baked potato or fries, salad and a roll is $15 and jumbo shrimp with your choice of baked potato or fries, salad and a roll is $13. Members who purchase five dinners on Friday or Saturday nights at regular price will receive their next dinner free. Daily lunch specials are available at the lodge from 11 a.m. For members and their guests.

EntertainmentThere will be a karaoke night on June 14 from 7 to 11 p.m. For members and their guests.

Not quite junk saleOn June 29, the Moose Lodge will be hosting a “not quite junk sale” from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Please donate items between June 26 and 29. Auctioneer Gene Bennett will auction off large items.

EaglesSteak nightSteak night has been canceled on May 24 due to the Memorial Day holiday.

Queen of Hearts nightThe Eagles will have a fun game on Monday nights from 5 to 7 p.m. Come up, have a cool one, purchase a ticket and win the Queen of Hearts.

New officer installationThe Tooele Eagles Aerie and Auxiliary will install the new officers for 2013-2014 on June 8 at the lodge. The instal-lation ceremony will be at 5 p.m. with a dinner to follow. There will be a raffle and everyone can go down and socialize and have a great time getting acquaint-ed with the new officers after dinner. Installation Chairman Kathy Schultz will serve a beef tip and noodle dinner with all the trimmings following the installa-tion ceremony. The cost will be $8 for adults and $4 for children 11 years old and younger. All members and guests are invited to attend. Please come out and support these new officers and the Fraternal Order of Eagles.

Father’s Day breakfastThe Auxiliary will host a Father’s Day breakfast on June 16 from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Fathers eat free, other adults will be $6 and children 11 years old and younger will be $3. Come out and have a great breakfast with dad. Members and guests invited.

Groups and EventsMemorial Day eventJoin us for Memorial Day at Clark Historic Farm, 378 W. Clark St. in Grantsville. Flapjacks at the farm from 8 to 11 a.m. Historic Grantsville 5K at 9 a.m. (meet at fire station). Dutch oven cook-off from 2 to 4 p.m. Craft booths, kids’ craft barn, music, tours, museums, activities, J. Reuben Clark Freedom Walk and more throughout the day. Contact Laurie Hurst at 884-4409 for more details or to volunteer.

VFW projectVFW Post 9413 needs members or volunteers to meet at the Tooele City Cemetary on May 25 at 10 a.m. to put flags on graves.

Memorial Day servicesMemorial Day services will be held at Tooele’s Veteran’s Park on May 27 at 11 a.m. The community is invited to attend.

Veggies/flowers for saleThe Tooele FFA chapter is selling a wide variety of vegetables and flowers. The greenhouse will be open May 27 to 31 from 7 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Flats are $20, 6-inch pots are $3, poney packs are $1.50 and 4-inch pots are $2. Please contact Bob Gowans at 830-2336 or Janette Shields at 830-1139 with any questions.

Summer agricultureAll FFA members who are enrolled in summer agriculture need to come to one of the three days of the orientation from May 28 to 30. A free breakfast will be held in the animal lab at 8 a.m. If you have any questions, contact Bob Gowans at 830-2336, Janette Shields at 830-1139 or Colby Champneys at 5112-2512.

Intro to yogaA free introduction to yoga class will be held May 25 at 10:30 a.m. by Radiance Yoga and Healing Arts. The class will be held at Meier & Marsh Professional Therapies at North Pointe. For more info, visit www.radianceyoga.org/events or call (801) 599-8222.

Radiant body info meetingThere will be a free informational meeting about Radiant Body Intensive: Transform Your Body, Mind and Life on June 3 from 9 to 10 a.m. by Radiance Yoga and Healing Arts at N-Step Dance Academy. For more info, visit www.radianceyoga.org/events or call (801) 599-8222.

4-H summer kick-offLet’s get the summer kicked off with style. Join us May 24 for the 4-H sum-mer kick-off party. Drop in anytime between 4 and 7 p.m. at 151 N. Main St. Bring your friends and family and check out what’s going on in Tooele County 4-H this summer. There will be games and surprises for all. Enjoy the free ice cream sundae bar. You will be able to sign up for summer day camps and learn more about what 4-H has to offer. For more information, call the Tooele County USU Extension office at 277-2401 or 277-2405. Special thanks to the Rocky Mountain Power Foundation for providing funding to make this event possible.

5K Freedom RunThe Kiwanis Club’s 16th annual 5K Freedom Run will be held July 4. Early bird registration is $20 for adults and $10 for children 12 and under. Visit our website at 5kfreedomrun.eventbrite.com for all the details. Sponsorships available. Proceeds from the run go toward our support of the Babycare Cupboard within the Tooele County Food Bank, Head Start, Children’s Health-Connection Fair, prizes and associated costs for our annual “Great American Award” essay contest for fifth graders in our countywide school district, and other projects that serve the needs of children.

Car showThe Victory Junction fifth annual car show will be held June 1 at 15 Plaza Drive in Stansbury Park. From 8 to 10

a.m. is check in, and from 2 to 3 p.m. prizes and trophies will be awarded. Cost is $20 for preregistration and $25 the day of the event. For more info or to sign up, call 884-5117. Victory Junction Camp is to enrich the lives of children with chronic or life threatening illnesses by creating camping experiences that are fun, exciting, physically safe and medically sound. There will be a balloon artist, music, silent auction, food and a great time. This event is alcohol free.

Car/bike showThe Bikers Against Child Abuse Western Utah Chapter’s sixth annual free car and bike show will be June 1 at 762 N. Main St. in Tooele. The top three cages and top three bikes will be awarded. Registration starts at 10 a.m., ballots are counted at 2 p.m. and awards will be given at 3 p.m. Come support BACA and learn more about our mission.

Poker runThe Bikers Against Child Abuse Western Utah Chapter’s poker run will be held June 8. Registration opens at 9 a.m. at Home Depot in Tooele. Kickstands up at 11 a.m. There will be high and low hand, bike games and prize drawings. Cost is $20 for a single rider and $25 for a double rider. Food will be provided by All Star Bowling & Entertainment at the end of the ride.

Horsemen trails projectThe West Desert Chapter of the Back Country Horsemen of Utah is conducting a maintenance day on the trails in Left Hand Fork on June 8 as part of National Trails Day. The chapter needs to cut back brush and trees, remove deadfall, dig water drains to prevent rainwater from eroding the trail and reroute some of the trails. The trails get used by hik-ers, bikers and horsemen throughout the year. Our organization is soliciting help from organizations and individuals for this project. We will have a planning meeting on June 3 at 7:30 p.m. in the toll gate parking area. Please call Carol Nudell at 830-3835 or Stew Paulick at 830-4196 if you plan on attending the meeting.

Special needs dance classTooele has a free special needs dance class. We will be doing performances that are optional. Please call Susan Trujillo at 882-5496 if you are inter-ested. We would love to have everyone, no matter what gender or ability. They all have the same opportunities in dance. We teach on a basic level and can accommodate anyone. The range of students right now is 7 to 47 years of age. Please come check us out.

County fair entertainmentWe would like to invite anyone and everyone to have an opportunity to perform for the Tooele County Fair this year. We would like to involve locals and anyone with talent to strut their stuff. Do you sing, dance, act, mime, tumble, do magic or have a band? This is your year. Please call Susan Trujillo at 882-5496 and we will try to accommodate all of you. The fair is planned for Aug. 2 and 3.

Stockton DUP MuseumThe Stockton DUP Museum will be open on Jubilee Day, June 1, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Come and see what we have.

Book fairA “Books are Fun” book fair will be held at Mountain West Medical Center, 2055 N. Main St., on May 28 and 29 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. There will be more than 250 titles to choose from at great prices.

Master Gardener meetingThe next meeting of the Tooele County Master Gardeners is scheduled for May 23 at the USU Extension classroom, 151 N. Main St. in Tooele. The business meeting is at 6:30 p.m. followed at 7 p.m. with the presentation “Perfecting Your County and State Fair Entries.” The public is invited to come and hear how Louise Hulet, who has been submitting county fair canning and produce entries for over 30 years, won numerous rib-bons for her entries. They will also hear Wade Bitner, who has served as the Horticultural and Agricultural Extension Agent for both Salt Lake and Tooele counties, give his ideas on what he has looked for when judging the county fair entries. Learn how to submit prize winning entries in the county and state fairs.

Diagnostic clinicIt is that time of year again when the Master Gardeners are available to help solve gardening problems on Wednesdays. This will continue through September. Tooele County Master Gardeners conduct the diagnostic clinic for the benefit of all county resi-dents. People can bring a sample of the plant with the problem to the USU Extension library room, 151 N. Main St., Wednesdays between 3 and 6 p.m. Volunteers will also be on hand to answer questions about growing plants in flowerbeds and vegetable gardens as well as planting and caring for shrubs and trees.

Annual garden tourThe 15th annual Tooele Valley Garden Tour is just a few weeks away on June 15 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Don’t miss this fantastic event featuring 12 locations throughout the Tooele Valley. For the Master Gardeners, there are many volunteer positions that need filling. Contact Deb Hartwell at [email protected] or Jay Cooper at [email protected] for informa-tion about volunteering on the day of the event. For more information, visit www.annualgardentour.info or www.tooel-emastergardeners.org.

Art and Literary SocietyThe next meeting of Stansbury Art and Literary Society will be May 28 at 7 p.m. at the Tooele County Chamber of Commerce, 154 S. Main St. in Tooele. The monthly project is to do a work of art using collage. Collage is a technique of composing a work of art by pasting on a surface various materials not nor-mally associated with one another. Bring the completed project to the meeting for display and your commentary about the project. The monthly presentation will be given by Melissa Clark, renowned paper cutting artist. She will discuss paper cutting and do demonstrations. The public is invited to attend to learn about this intricate type of art work.

LaForge Encore TheatreLaForge Encore Theatre Company presents Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “The Sound of Music” on June 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22, 24 and 25

at the Tooele High School auditorium at 7 p.m. Cost is $10 for adults and $7 for children under 12 and senior citizens. Tickets go on sale June 1. For tickets, call 248-2048 or email [email protected]. Our produc-tion is sponsored by the Tooele City Arts Council and the Parks, Arts and Recreation Tax.

Grist Mill auditionsBenson Gristmill Performing Arts Foundation will be holding auditions for “The Unsinkable Molly Brown” on June 5 and 6 from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Stansbury High School auditorium. Those inter-ested should prepare 16 bars of a classic Broadway song. Minus tracks or recorded accompaniment preferred (CDs or iPods are OK). No accompanist will be provided. Please bring resume with a headshot, and a list of conflicts from June 10 to Aug. 13. Performances will be Aug. 8 through 12 (no Sunday per-formance). For more information, please contact [email protected].

Tooele County DemocratsThe next meeting of the Tooele County Democrats will be May 23 at 7 p.m. at the Tooele County Chamber of Commerce, 154 S. Main St. in Tooele. Come and join Gillian Young as she conducts her first meeting as the newly elected chairperson of the Tooele County Democrats. Gill is very enthusi-astic about being in this position and wants county Democrats to come and share with her in establishing a unified party platform. All Democrats are wel-come to attend this meeting. Come and help to spread the word that Democrats are alive and well in Tooele County.

Pathways Shelter fundraiserPathways Domestic Violence Shelter is holding its first ever fundraiser since becoming a 501(c)3 in November 2012. The fundraiser will be held June 8 at the Dow James building in Tooele. We are in need of sponsors, vendors, music (preferably karaoke, but open to others) and volunteers. Please con-tact Joanne Shugart at 248-9900 or [email protected].

Plein air art contestThe Tooele City Arts Council is excited to announce the first ever plein air art contest to be held during the Tooele Arts Festival, June 17 to 23. Artists can sell and display their work and win prizes up to $500. Categories will be draw and paint, photography and found objects. Please go to www.tooelecity.org and click on the Tooele City Arts Council logo for registration information and details, or contact Chris Wilcox at 840-3838.

Masonic bike raceThe annual Tooele Masonic 50-mile bike race will be on June 1 at 6:30 a.m. Proceeds will benefit the Children’s Justice Center. There will be a finish line barbecue. Find details when you register at raceforjustice.eventbrite.com. Regular meetings are held the second Friday of the month. Dinner is at 6 p.m. with the meeting at 7 p.m. Breakfast meetings are the second Saturday of the month at Jim’s at 9 a.m. Eastern Star’s regular meetings are on the first Saturday of the month at 2 p.m.

Tennis campTooele Tennis is hosting a camp for students in second through ninth grades from May 28 to 31. Second through fifth graders will practice between 9 and 11 a.m., and sixth through ninth graders will practice between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Cost is $30 and includes a T-shirt. Forms for entry are at the Tooele Junior High School or Tooele High School offices. Email [email protected] for more information.

Soccer tryoutsIn May and June, the Stansbury Elite Soccer Club will be holding tryouts for all of its teams for the upcoming 2013-2014 season. The official tryout schedule and information can be found at www.stansburyelite.com. Stansbury Elite is the club with the largest number of competitive soccer teams in Tooele County with teams for players ages 8 to 18 from Stockton to Salt Lake City. It’s also the least expensive while boast-ing the best winning percentage and coaches ready to help your player excel on and off the soccer field.

Stansbury footballStansbury football sign ups began online on May 1. In person registra-tions will be from 9 a.m. to noon at the Stansbury Clubhouse on June 15 and July 13. Please print two copies of the online registration.

All Star Hoop CampThe All Star Hoop Camp will be held at Tooele High School June 3 to 6 by THS’s varsity basketball staff and play-ers. Learn to master the fundamentals that make a great player, like ball han-dling, passing, defense, guard play, post play, communication, rebounding, team concepts and shooting. There will be a camp T-shirt for every camper. Times will be 8 to 10 a.m. for boys entering ninth to 12th grades, 10 a.m. to noon for boys entering second to fifth grades, and noon to 2 p.m. for boys entering sixth to eighth grades. Questions? Contact Coach Faux at (801) 921-9205. Camp fee is $60, payable to the THS finance office or by phone at 833-1978.

Summer clubThe Tooele Boys & Girls Club will host a summer club from June 3 to Aug. 16. The club serves youth ages 6 to 12. Cost is $125 per month for an activ-ity/snack fee. Cost is only $375 for the entire summer. Please note that space is limited and $125 is requested at time of registration. Register at any club loca-tion: Dow James Building at 438 W. 400 North; Youth Center at 102 N. Seventh St.; or Tooele Office at 352 N. Main St. Call 843-5719 and ask for Darlene, Marsha or Alisha for more information. Daily morning and afternoon snacks will be provided. Bring your own sack lunch. The club will be held at the Youth Center from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and the Dow James Building from 2:30 to 6 p.m. Transportation from Tooele Youth Center to Dow James Building is provided by the Boys & Girls Club. Remember that open recreation is still operating from 2:30 to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday at the Dow James Building and the cost is $10 per year. That fee is waived for summer club participants.

Gem and Mineral SocietyThe Tooele Gem and Mineral Society meets the second Tuesday of each month in the Tooele Senior Center, 59 E. Vine St., at 7:30 p.m., back entrance. Membership dues are only $10 a year if you would like to join. Come learn about rocks and minerals, field trips for rock collecting and our big rock show in September. Come have fun with us. Visit us on Facebook. Contact us at 882-5752 or [email protected].

Bereavement support groupHarmony Hospice offers a weekly bereavement support group for any per-son who has had a loved one who has died. You do not need to be affiliated with Harmony or have had services in order to come and participate. Everyone is welcome. The group meets every Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at Harmony Home Health and Hospice, 2356 N. 400 East, Bldg. B, Suite 206 in Tooele. Please contact Leonard Barber for any questions you might have at 843-9054.

Sons of Utah PioneersThe goal of the Sons of Utah Pioneers, Settlement Canyon Chapter is to keep alive the history and tremendous con-tributions of our early Tooele County pioneers and others. If this is something that you may be interested in joining, please attend a pot luck dinner the first Thursday of each month in the Tooele Senior Citizens Center at 6:30 p.m. Dinner is followed by a short program. Park behind the building and enter the northwest doors.

Alzheimer’s support groupOpen to anyone caring for someone with Alzheimer’s disease or related dementia (memory issues). Learn about this disease. Get/share ideas. Bring your loved one along. Trained staff will assist them while you attend the meeting. Cosponsored by Tooele County Aging Services (to participate call 843-4107) and Alzheimer’s Association–Utah Chapter. For information call (800)272-3900.

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.

Family Support CenterThe Family Support Center is a non-profit agency providing services in Salt Lake and Tooele County. Free 12-week in-home parenting skills program. Families with children birth to 17 will receive instruction during an 80-minute weekly visit to gain the tools they need to strengthen their family. Topics dis-cussed include communication, conflict resolution, attachment and bonding, establishing rules and routines as well as managing stress. Please contact Rachel at (801) 955-9110 ext. 107 for more information. You can also visit familysupportcenter.org.

SeniorsGrantsville Senior CenterThe senior center is for the enjoyment of all senior citizens 55 and older. Activities have started. For info, call 884-3446. Activities include bunco and arthritic exercise two days a week, and bingo, ceramics, pinochle and jewelry once a week. Meals on Wheels for homebound. Lunch served daily. Suggested donation of $2.50. The center also provides rides to the store or doctor visits in Tooele and Grantsville areas. Call 843-4102. The May birthday

dinner will be on May 31 at 4 p.m. Entertainment is Kent’s Gymnastics.

Tooele Senior CenterThe senior center is for the enjoyment of all senior citizens 55 and older. New and exciting activities have started. For info, call 843-4110. These include bridge and pinochle, arthritic exercise program three times a week, line danc-ing, woodworking, Wii games, watercolor class and karaoke. Meals on Wheels for homebound. Lunch served, daily dona-tion of $2.50. The center also provides transportation to the store or doctor visits in Tooele and Grantsville areas.

Senior CircleSenior Circle is for those ages 50 and better and costs just $15 a year per person or $27 for a couple. Call 843-3690 for more information or a member-ship application. Lots of great health benefits and fun activities.

RecoveryAddiction recoveryThe freedom from addiction group, RUSH, holds meetings on Wednesdays at 7 p.m., at 23 S. Main Street, Suite 33, Tooele.

Recovery InternationalRecovery International is a structured self-help group that teaches skills to relieve symptoms caused by stress, anger, fear, anxiety, depression and confusion. Support and fellowship is extended among those who share these kinds of problems. We’re now meeting at the Grantsville City Library, 42 N. Bowery St., from 5:30 to 7 p.m. on Tuesdays. Call Mary Ann at 884-0215 for information. Please call the library at 884-1670 to make sure we are having the group before coming.

S.A. recovery groupS.A. men’s group meets every Tuesday night at 8:30 p.m. at the Green House in Tooele. Call 841-7783 with questions.

Al-AnonIs someone’s drinking affecting your life? You don’t have to be alone. Al-Anon meetings every Wednesday from 11 a.m. to noon at residence, 77 W. 400 North. For more information please contact Perky at 843-7145 or Elizabeth at 884-0825.

Food addictsFood addicts in recovery aim to lose weight and keep it off. No dues, fees or weigh-ins. Weekly meetings held at Tooele County Museum, 47 E. Vine Street, on Thursdays at 6 p.m. Come in the back door; meetings are held in the basement. Call 882-0805 for more information.

Take off pounds sensiblyNeed help to lose those extra pounds? We can help. TOPS is a weight loss sup-port group open to men, women, teens and pre-teens. Meetings are held every Tuesday at 5 p.m. at the Tooele Senior Center, 59 E. Vine Street. Call Mary Lou at 830-1150, Lisa at 882-1442 or see www.tops.org for more information.

Addiction recovery TooeleLDS Family Services addiction recovery meeting every Tuesday from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at the LDS chapel at 1030 S. 900 West, in the Relief Society room. Enter on the west side of the church. The handicap entrance is on the south side of the church. This meeting addresses all addictions or character weaknesses. No children, please.

Addiction recovery GrantsvilleLDS Family Services addition recovery meeting every Thursday night from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at the LDS chapel at 415 W. Apple Street in the Relief Society room. Enter on the north side of the church. The handicap entrance is also on the north side of the church. This meeting address all addictions or character weaknesses. No children, please.

LDS addiction family supportIf you have a loved one who is strug-gling with addictions of any kind, find help and support Sunday evenings from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at the Erda Ward building at 323 E. Erda Way. Enter on the east side of the building and go to the Relief Society room.

LDS porn addiction programAn LDS pornography addiction recovery support group meeting will be held every Friday evening from 7:30 to 9 p.m., Stansbury Stake Center, 417 E. Benson Road. Enter on the southwest side of building. Separate men’s recov-ery (for men struggling with pornography addictions) and women’s support meet-ings (for women whose husbands or family members are struggling with por-nography) are held at the same time.

The Bulletin BoardTHURSDAY May 23, 2013B8 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 advertising 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.

COURTESY OF MARIANNE HOLLIEN

Harris Elementary School’s fourth, fifth and sixth grade students walked to Elton Park to participate in a community service project. They worked together to clean up around the playground structures, tennis courts, basketball court and baseball fields by picking up garbage around the areas. The goal was to encourage the students to remember to use the garbage cans whenever they are in a public area so that everyone can enjoy a clean park.

THURSDAY May 23, 2013 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN B9

by Beth J. Harpaz

ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK (AP) — When the school year ends a few days from now, millions of kids will head off to sleepaway camp for a summer filled with color wars, kayaking and bunk life. Most will have a great time, some will make friends for life, and many will look back on the experience fondly.

But amid these happy camp-ers is another group of veterans who recall sleepaway camp quite differently. These were the kids who cried every day and sent let-ters home begging to be picked up. They were lonesome, mis-erable, bullied; hated the bugs, hated the pool. Many refused to ever go back, and decades later, they can recall their suffering in visceral detail — from poison ivy to wretched food.

“Oh did I hate overnight camp,” recalled Lauren Russ, 43, who lives in Chicago. “I cried every day and wrote two letters home a day asking my parents to come get me.”

Russ’ mom and dad saved those notes and even read some of them aloud at her wedding shower 10 years ago. “I got another letter from you,” reads one of the heart-wrenching lines in Russ’ schoolgirl’s script. “Every time I get a letter I cry and become very homesick.”

What was so bad about camp? Let Russ count the ways: “I’ll never forget the first night I had to sleep in a tent. I hated the public showers, I hated sharing a room with several other girls, I hated the anxiety of packing and saying goodbye.”

For Kelsey Tomascheski, 48, of Santa Clara, Calif., camp memories center on bad food.

“I will admit that I was a picky eater, but the problem was more on quality,” said Tomascheski. “I could only handle so many bland spaghetti feeds, too-salty chicken strips, and soggy fries. Usually halfway through the week I gave up and only ate PB&J at all three meals.”

Some unhappy campers hated bunk life. “It was dirty,” recalled Gerry Cotten, 25, a website developer in Toronto. “I was always into computers, and some sort of computer camp probably would have been fun, but sleeping in an ancient old wooden cabin, with disgusting washrooms a five-minute walk away, wasn’t really appealing.”

The great outdoors didn’t hold much charm either: “Taking a dip in the lake each morn-ing instead of having a shower wasn’t really for me. They called it the Polar Dip.”

According to the American Camp Association, nearly 9 mil-lion kids under the age of 18 attend one of the country’s 7,000 overnight camps each summer, with stays ranging from a week to two months. Research on the association’s website suggests that going to camp can build confidence, self-esteem, social skills, independence and a sense of adventure.

But for some campers, the experience was more like the 1963 hit comedy song that began: “Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh, I am here at Camp Grenada. Camp is very entertaining. And they say we’ll have some fun if it stops raining.”

Kim Cooper, 46, hated the structured activities. “They said `You need to go make lanyards now,”’ she recalled. “Why do I need a lanyard?” She preferred “hiking solo in the woods look-

ing for interesting wildlife.” But other campers thought that was weird, and Cooper soon found herself “surrounded by a group of scary big kids who were shov-ing me around and calling me Moses” — because of a stick she carried on her treks.

“I had no alternative but to bite one of them,” she said. Not surprisingly, she was soon sent home. But Cooper didn’t grow up to be a hermit in the woods. In fact, she makes a living deal-ing with groups of strangers, running the Esotouric bus tour company in Los Angeles with her husband.

Others also note that being miserable at summer camp is not a sign that someone’s going to be meek or fearful as an adult. Ryan K. Croft, 29, of Arlington, Va., was once a “mama’s boy” who cried himself to sleep at camp. But he grew up to found an international adventure trav-el company, leading more than 100 group trips to 20 countries on four continents.

“My family likes to say I was a late bloomer and just needed more time than others to find my way,” he said. “I personally just think it’s coincidental or irony at its finest.”

Sometimes the problem with sleepaway camp was a simple mismatch. One woman was sent to a Bible camp even though her family never went to church. Jason Fischbach, 23, was sent to a Jewish camp in New York, but “I didn’t know the prayers. I couldn’t tell the same stories as other kids, and I didn’t fit in at all. I was bullied for being dif-ferent.”

Some kids hated camp at first but over the course of sev-eral summers grew to like it. Kevin Strauss, 43, of Leesburg, Va., cried all the time at his first camp, at age 7. Other kids made fun of him, and he even got into a fight. “I can still remember it 36 years later,” he says. His second time away, he got poi-son ivy. “I spent a lot of time at the infirmary because it felt like someone was there to take care of you, kind of like your mom,” he said.

But his third time, as a sixth-grader, was “fantastic,” recalled Strauss, founder of a website called FamilyeJournal.com. As an adult, Strauss says, he’s loved

wilderness expeditions, and even though he hated the camp pool, he’s become an Ironman athlete who goes “swimming in the ocean for miles.”

Maybe, he observes, some kids just aren’t “ready to separate” from mom or dad when they’re first sent to camp. “Eventually we do grow up and learn inde-pendence but everyone is dif-ferent and has their own pace,” he said.

So what’s the take-away for parents, given that some camp-ers never get over being home-sick, others grow to enjoy camp, and some who hate the experi-ence as kids became adventur-ous adults?

Fran Walfish, a family psy-chotherapist in Hollywood who writes for Parents magazine’s “Ask the Expert,” doesn’t rec-ommend sleepaway camp for kids under 9 unless they are very outgoing and transition easily, or unless an older sibling is at the same camp. Even with older kids, she recommends sending them to camp with a good friend so they have a built-in buddy.

And if you get tearful letters or calls home, “do not ever leap abruptly to rescue,” she advises. But do call the camp, and “if the trend is not getting better by day three or four, that is cause for concern.” Some kids have more

separation anxiety than others, and a depressed child who can’t eat or sleep shouldn’t be forced to stay away.

But it’s also important to make sure kids don’t spend the

summer watching TV and play-ing videogames. Fortunately, Walfish notes, there’s an alter-native: Day camp, where they “can sleep in their own beds at night.”

Hello muddah? Not everyone loved sleepaway camp

SHUTTERSTOCK

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Kids who start drinking at age 14 have a 40% chance of addiction. At age 21, just 7%.

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the medics did not bring Jared into the hospital because he had become comatose. They were still in the ambulance fighting to save his life.

The first doctor Michelle had a chance to speak with confirmed the bleak recovery prospect.

“He said, ‘I don’t have time to talk to you. We are life-flighting your son. He’s got bleeding on his brain. He’s swelling so bad he’s not breathing. He probably won’t make it. I’ve got to go,’” she said.

All this took place in just a matter of minutes. It was approximately 10 minutes from the time Jared fell to the pave-ment after receiving the blow while play-boxing until he arrived at the hospital.

Jared was a block away from the Garbett’s home in St. George at a friend’s house when the accident happened. Michelle was at home unpacking and Lee was driving to California on a business trip with his boss. They were about a half an hour south of Las Vegas at the time.

One of Jared’s friends called Michelle with the news. After Michelle arrived at the hospital and obtained the information from the doctor, she called Lee.

When Michelle explained the situation and told Lee that the nurse had informed her to kiss Jared goodbye because he might not live, his initial reaction was shock.

“It just couldn’t be,” Lee said. “I knew he was probably going to die. I was trying to be a man and not cry in the car, but that didn’t last.”

Jared was life-flighted to a Las Vegas Level One Trauma Center. All medical personnel involved didn’t think Jared had a chance to even survive the flight.

Lee’s boss immediately turned the car around and headed back to Las Vegas. Lee arrived at the hospital before Michelle, who had to drive the one and a half hours from St. George to Las Vegas.

When Jared arrived in Las Vegas, the medical team imme-diately began surgery to relieve the swelling on his brain. Jared received a craniotomy, which is a surgery where doctors remove

a section of the skull to expose the brain. This allows pressure caused from the swelling due to the injury to be released.

The doctors refused to make any promises. They explained that the first 72 hours were the most critical because the pos-sibility of death was the greatest during that time.

Their first glimmer of hope came on the third day when the medical staff took Jared off of coma-inducing medications to see if he would respond.

“He didn’t wake up, but he was thrashing around,” Michelle said.

The nurses assured the Garbetts that it was a good sign, meaning his brain was at least responsive to pain.

The coma waking-up process usually takes five to seven days because the body takes that long to metabolize the medicine. It took Jared nine days to fully regain consciousness.

Although Jared doesn’t remember it, he recounts what others have told him about that time.

“I came out swinging,” he said. “In my mind, I was still boxing with my friends.”

Jared would get frustrated because he didn’t know where he was. He would ask his dad where they were and Lee would explain they were at the hospital.

“He would argue and say, ‘No we’re not. We’re at Dairy Delight,’ because he had been at Dairy Delight two days before the acci-dent,” Lee said.

Jared said he doesn’t remem-ber much of that time during the waking-up phase. His first memories start three and a half weeks after the accident when he was moved to Primary Children’s Hospital in Salt Lake City. Jared remembers the flight there.

“Once I left Vegas on the fixed wing, I remember everything after that,” he said.

By that time, everyone was amazed at Jared’s progress. The doctors, nurses and others who were experienced with major brain traumas all said Jared’s recovery was miraculous.

“Jared recovered further than anybody expected,” Lee said.

According to the Glasgow Coma Scale, which is used to assess patients with major brain trauma, Jared was not expected to survive. The scale measures three indicating factors, eye response, motor response and verbal response. Patients who are completely non-responsive receive a score of one in each of these categories. A GCS score of 8 or below is considered coma-

tose. Out of a possible 15 points, Jared was a three.

“Jared was the lowest, which is death,” Michelle said.

The Garbetts, who are mem-bers of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, attri-bute most of Jared’s recovery to the faith and prayers of all their family and friends.

“We had prayer and fasting from people literally all over the world and of all faiths,” Lee said.

They had LDS missionary friends who were serving in Holland and Africa fasting and praying for them. Their own ward congregation in St. George and those who knew them from Tooele had fasts on behalf of Jared.

One of Jared’s friends, who was present at the sparring match which caused the acci-dent, had his church group at the Calgary Chapel pray for Jared. The CFO of Lee’s company, who attends a Baptist church, had prayer circles within his congregation.

Those prayers were just part of what the Garbetts see as a miracle.

“I believe in miracles,” Michelle said. “I see and I hear of all these small pieces of the puzzle that are all these parts of a miracle that equal out to some-thing grand.”

They believe modern medi-cine also played a factor in the miraculous recovery.

“We had great medicine, great nurses and great care,” Lee said.

There were circumstances during those first few hours that Garbetts also attribute to Jared’s extraordinary recovery.

One is the timing of the 911 call. One of the teens refereeing the boxing match was studying to be an EMT and knew the signs

of trauma. His knowledge led to the ambulance being called right away.

“There were just a lot of things that kind of fell into place,” Michelle said. “Everything seemed to happen for a reason.”

Within a month after the acci-dent, Jared was in physical rehab to learn to walk again. By July 2011, Jared was nearly back to normal, according to his scores on the neuro-physiological tests performed. Before the accident Jared’s IQ was 114, and a mere six months later, he was back to the low 100s. Michelle’s last blog entry in July 2011 talks of this day and the reaction from the doctor about the test results.

“He said that considering everything that happened, Jared is a miracle,” Michelle wrote on the blog. “He shouldn’t be where he is today.”

His rapid recovery has allowed him to hold several part time jobs at restaurants, both in St. George and locally. Currently, he is finishing school via an online schooling program.

Miraculous recoveries aren’t without their continuing tri-als. Jared deals with memory problems. To this day, he can’t remember that eventful day or the accident. All he knows is what his family and friends have told him. His right hand also doesn’t work like it used to and will occasionally hurt.

His recovery will continue for many more years. However, even with the struggles he still faces, he wouldn’t change the outcome of that day. He believes he has gained a better outlook on life because of the accident.

“I’m more happy and posi-tive,” he said. “I’m more thankful for my life.”

Miracle continued from page B1

B10

DAVID BERN/TTB PHOTO

Jared Garbett runs with his dog, Daisy, at Spencer Park.

DAVID BERN/TTB PHOTO

Jared Garbett and his dog, Daisy, take a breather after running at Spencer Park. Garbett received a craniotomy shortly after being knocked out while boxing with friends, but has since miraculously recovered.

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Please send your resume, references, cover letter detailing salary requirements and three writing samples to editor

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Subscribe Today • 882-0050

THURSDAY May 23, 2013 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN B11

Catch that flea!A flea is tickling

the giraffe. Follow the flea’s path.

Cut out six numbers from the newspaper. Arrange them into different“greater than” and “less than”

sentences.

Standards Link: Math: Number Sense; compare and order whole numbers using the symbols for less

than and greater than (<,>).

Don’t challenge a giraffe to see who can stick out their tongue the farthest! Color the spaces that have 2 dots red to find out how many inches a giraffe can stick out its tongue.

If you could ask a giraffe any questions you wanted, what would you ask?

That little bird is called an oxpecker and it is a good friend to a giraffe. We don’t have arms and hands to flick away pesky ticks, fleas and flies. Oxpeckers pick them off of us. They eat the little pests and also help keep us clean.

Giraffes are the tallest land animals. Find the missing number to find out how tall a giraffe grows.

Male giraffes can grow to be _____ meters tall. That is the size of 3-4 grown men standing on each other’s shoulders!

Female giraffes can grow to be _____ meters tall.

Baby giraffes are about 2 meters tall when they are born. That is more than 6 feet tall! If one meter equals about 3 feet, approximately how many feet tall are adult giraffes?

Add the numbers to find out!

Do you know how many bones are in your neck? Subtract these numbers for the answer.

A long, deep sleep is very dangerous for giraffes. We might not sense when a predator comes near.

During the day, we doze on and off for a few minutes at a time. Quietly and gently we relax our necks and let our heads hang downward.

At night, we lie down. But even then, we only take cat naps. We wake up every few minutes and look around.

START

FINISH

Standards Link: Life Science: Animals have different structures that serve different functions in survival; living things depend on one another in an ecosystem.

Standards Link: Algebra: Solve problems involving numeric equations; express simple unit conversions.

Standards Link: Number Sense: Solve problems using addition andsubtraction.

Standards Link: Life Science: Animals have different structures that serve different functions in survival.

Join us on a trip to Africa to interview a giraffe!

ANSWER: Male = 18 ft. Female = 15 ft.

© 2013 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 29, No. 23

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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.

GIRAFFESBLENDTONGUESPATTERNSTICKSSLEEPHANGSPOTSPREDATORBONESNECKGROWSOXPECKERPATHNAPS

1. Write a short subject-verb sentence.Example: Maria laughed.

2. Look through the newspaper for words to add to the sentence.

Example: The talented Maria caught a flying baseball and laughed aloud.Standards Link: Sentence Structure; students construct simple sentences; use correct word order in written sentences.

Sentence Stre-e-e-etchers

The patterns on a giraffe’s body are not just for looks. They camouflage us. We can blend in with the shadows and shafts of light that filter around trees and bushes.Color all of the giraffes you see in the grove of trees.

Standards Link: Life Science: Animals have different structures that serve different functions in survival.

AN

SWER

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Five pieces of information below are true and one is false. Can you figure out which it is?

1. The tongue of a giraffe is a bluish-purple and is strong enough to grasp the foliage from the thorny acacia tree. They can also use their tongue to clean their nose.

2. There are nine subspecies of giraffe each with different pattern markings and each giraffe has it’s own individual markings.

3. Giraffe’s will rub their necks together as a sign of friendship.

4. All giraffes have horns called ossicones.

5. A giraffe can close its nostrils to protect it from sandstorms and ants.

6. Giraffes have to splay out their legs or kneel down to drink. They are vulnerable to predators when drinking.

Numbers 1,2,4,5,6 are TRUE. Number 3 is false. A male giraffe uses it neck in combat. A “necking” duel can last more than half and hour and it is used to establish dominance.

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

Long Neck NewsPretend you woke up one morning with the neck of

a giraffe. Write a news story about being the first person with such a neck.

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINB12 Thursday May 23, 2013

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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN C1THURSDAY May 23, 2013

THURSDAY May 23, 2013TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINC2

ANSWERS ON C4

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Puzzle #2867-D

Difficult

1 2 3 45 2

4 6 78 7 3

7 6 9 24 1 7

9 5 62 1

3 4 8 9

Sudoku

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Puzzle #2867-M

Medium

1 2 34 5 6 73 8 95 2 6 4 3

2 58 3 4 7 1

4 9 66 1 3 2

7 5 4

ACROSS 1 Stick with it 8 Wife of Cronus 12 “Man — Mancha” 16 JFK’s successor 19 Not too much 20 A very long time 21 Brushing and flossing 23 1985 Larry McMurtry

novel 25 Cockney, e.g. 26 Inferior newspaper 27 Municipality

28 Exude vitality 29 Sitting atop 33 Certs piece, e.g. 34 Regard 35 Plane’s path 36 Songsmith Berlin 38 Like traditional key-

boards 40 Neuters 41 Film director Kotcheff 43 Suffix with pent— 44 “Je —” (French for “I

am”) 45 Double-curve shape

46 Starts seeing things out of balance

52 “— Got Nobody” (stan-dard song)

54 Baseball’s Blue Jays, on scoreboards

55 Job to do 56 Novelist Brown 57 Birthplace of GM 60 Infuse with gas 62 Not spicy 63 Train puller 65 1981 hit for Earth, Wind

& Fire

69 “... with — -foot pole!” 70 Voting slip 72 Picked by 70-Across 73 “Lord, is —?” 74 Points where rays meet 77 Jr.’s jr. 78 Mack vehicle 79 It vibrates in the direc-

tion of its propagation 83 AOL or MSN 86 She’s a Brit. royal 87 French sea 88 Infuriation 89 Cut’s partner 91 Emanates 94 Meryl Streep’s alma

mater 96 Rips to bits 98 French for “bridge” 99 Toupees, e.g. 100 Certain citrus orchard 102 Cheap town bar 105 Spanish pot 106 Make out 107 County in northwest

Florida 108 Gunpowder or firework 113 In error 114 Chimps, e.g. 115 Yellow avenue in

Monopoly 116 Hive buzzer 117 Bird’s refuge 118 Jet-set jets, once 119 Bridge part

DOWN 1 Chum 2 “Turn to Stone” rock gp. 3 — Tin Tin 4 With severity

5 “Jumpin’ Jack Flash, —!” 6 Catchphrase 7 Pro — 8 Split again 9 Noisy owl 10 Be jealous of 11 Enzyme ending 12 Chinese tea 13 — Loops (cereal) 14 Tall and thin 15 Actor Alan 16 Poet Sidney 17 Nominal promotion of a

military officer 18 Actor Irons 22 Least warm 24 Italian author Umberto 28 Cruise ship 29 Beam intensely 30 Sharp barks 31 Tax-deferred svgs. plans 32 Back something with a

wager 33 Liquid petrolatum 37 Steam 38 Answer’s opposite: Abbr. 39 Candle part 42 Mass. hours 44 Hot tub site 46 “Stretch” car 47 Inflexibility 48 Proofer’s “keep this in” 49 Ninny 50 Trumpet part 51 Culminated 52 A part of 53 $20 bill dispenser 57 Thrash about 58 Kin of bingo 59 Trap post-blizzard 60 Gardner of film

61 Vietnamese holiday 62 Deride 64 “In the same place” foot-

note abbr. 66 Begin a tennis game

against 67 Adhesive 68 DVR button 71 Fibbing sorts 74 Rasp 75 Singer Redding 76 Since, slangily 78 Paving goo 80 Organized whole, in psy-

chology 81 PR concern 82 Requiring no cord 83 “As — often the case ...” 84 R-W hookup 85 Le Pew of cartoons 89 Book’s start 90 Nabs 91 Self-confidence 92 New player 93 Just to be sure 94 Bon — (epicure) 95 Totally wrong 97 Playwright Eve 99 Becomes hip, with “up” 101 Artist Ernst 103 Shylock’s offering 104 “Okey- —” 105 “Stupid me!” 108 — Cruces 109 Sgt.’s underling 110 103-Down accrual: Abbr. 111 Bk. number 112 Prior to, in sonnets

Super Crossword LOVE IS ALL AROUND

ANSWERS ON C4

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THURSDAY May 23, 2013 C3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

DEAR DR. DONOHUE: My doctor gave me some very unsettling news. He says I have cataracts in both eyes. I haven’t been able to sleep since he told me. My aunt was blind later in life. I don’t know the cause, but I do know that life was very tough for her.

I haven’t contacted the oph-thalmologist my doctor referred me to. I’m too scared. How are cataracts treated? How long is recuperation? — S.M.

ANSWER: If a doctor exam-ined the eyes of most people over 60, the doctor would tell them they have the beginning of a cataract. Do you know what a cataract is? Right behind the pupil is the eye’s lens, a small, oval-shaped, perfectly clear structure. The lens focuses light on the retina in the back of the eye, so we get a clear picture of what we see.

A cataract is a smudge in the lens. Proteins in the lens have stuck to each other to produce a stain in the lens like a thumb-print on the lens of glasses. Your cataract must not be large. You

have no complaints of it inter-fering with your vision. Most cataracts result from aging. Smoking, alcohol excess, con-stant exposure to sunlight and long-term use of high doses of cortisone drugs also contribute to cataract formation.

The evolution of your cataract to one that blurs vision is unpre-dictable. The process is painless. Difficulty seeing at night and difficulty reading fine print are early symptoms of cataracts affecting vision.

Treatment is close to miracu-lous. When the lens smudge greatly affects vision, the eye doctor removes the lens and replaces it with a lens made of plastic or silicone. Cataract removal is done as an outpa-tient. You can be up and about by the evening of surgery or the following day. You’ll be astounded at the minimum inconvenience of the procedure and with the vision that results from it.

• • •DEAR DR. DONOHUE: What’s

the best time to take a multivita-

min? I take one in the morning. That way I don’t forget to take it. — L.M.

ANSWER: I believe this is the most frequently asked question I get.

Vitamins A, D, E and K are fat-soluble vitamins. They’re better absorbed if they’re taken after a meal that has some fat or oils in it. Vitamins B and C are water-soluble and can be taken at any time.

I’m not convinced that the timing of vitamin-taking is all that important. Take your mul-tivitamin when it’s most conve-nient.

• • •DEAR DR. DONOHUE: I lift

weights seven days a week. I see that I am making progress. My arms are much bigger than they were. I’ve been told I’m overdo-ing it by lifting every day. Am I? — R.S.

ANSWER: It’s not a good idea to perform the same weightlift-ing exercises on consecutive days. Muscles need a full 48 hours to recover, rebuild and grow after an intense exercise session.

A day of lifting and then a day of rest is a good schedule. You can lift weights daily if you want to. Just don’t work the same muscles on consecutive days.

• • •Dr. Donohue regrets that he

is unable to answer individual letters, but he will incorporate them in his column whenever possible. Readers may write him or request an order form of available health newsletters at P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475.© 2013 North America Synd., Inc.All Rights Reserved

by Samantha Weaver

• It was Albert Einstein who made the following sage observation: “The significant problems we face cannot be solved at the same level of thinking we were at when we created them.”

• According to some Native American tribes, all you have to do to make a wish come true is to catch a butterfly,

whisper your wish to it and set it free.

• If you drive a white automo-bile, you have a lot of com-pany. There are more white cars in the United States than any other color.

• You probably are aware that the names that foreign places are known by in the English language are not always the same as the names of those places in the local tongue. The capital of Russia is called Moskva in that country, and to Italians it’s not Venice, but Venezia. Not all names sound so similar, though; if you didn’t know the lan-

guage, it would be nearly impossible to figure out that Ellinki Dimokratia is what Greeks call their country, and that Konungariket Sverige is Sweden to the Swedish. South Korea is known locally as Han Kook, China is Zhonghua Renmin Gonghe Guo, and Finland is Suomen Tasavalta.

• When Hernan Cortes reached the New World in the 1600s, he found the Aztecs drinking hot choco-late at their banquets.

• President Franklin Delano Roosevelt added both a swimming pool and a movie

theater to the White House.

• You probably knew that cats were revered in ancient Egypt, but did you know that when a domestic cat died, the family went into mourn-ing? Yep. People would shave their eyebrows to demon-strate their grief over the passing of their beloved pet.

• • •

Thought for the Day: “The nice thing about being a celeb-rity is that if you bore people they think it’s their fault.” — Henry Kissinger

© 2013 North America Synd., Inc.

Do you have a space in your home where you stash items because you

can’t bear to get rid of them? My friend Vi, who lived to be 102, had a way of dealing with those

things she couldn’t part with. Whether it was a snazzy shop-ping bag from a fancy store or another garage-sale treasure, she would put them in what she called her “just for now” room. She’d say with a chuckle and a twinkle in her eye, “These things are here just for now!”

I’ve noticed that I’ve picked up on her approach. I not only have a “just for now” drawer in my kitchen and a “just for now” shelf in the entry closet, but also a growing “just for now” space in the garage. That’s where things like old wooden chairs without seats end up.

If you have a sturdy wooden chair with a removable seat stored in an attic or garage in need of seat replacement, or if you find one for a few dollars at a garage sale, here’s a fun way to put it back in use, and you won’t have to pay for recan-ing it. Instead, weave Dad’s and Grandfather’s old neckties around the frame of the seat. You and your kids will be using the basic, simple weaving tech-nique they learn at school when making paper place mats.

Before you begin weaving about 30 neckties onto the chair, you might wish to sand it, apply a base coat or two of latex paint and then paint designs on the slats and legs with acrylic paint in playful colors.

To weave the seat:* Place chair right side

up. Make sure the old seat is removed completely. Wrap a

necktie over front and rear seat support, and tie it tightly with a double knot underneath the chair. (It may be easier to tie the knot if you turn the chair upside down). Slide the tie to the left side of the chair.

• Wrap around and knot a second tie next to the first. Continue adding and knotting about 15 more neckties to com-pletely cover the seat space.

* Weave horizontal rows with the basic over-and-under tech-nique using the same number of additional ties. Simply weave a tie over and under the vertical ties, keeping them close togeth-er. Double knot each one tightly under the chair. When complete, your seat should be firm and comfortable.

* Trim off excess tie length under the chair.

• • •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.”

© 2013 Donna EricksonDistributed by King Features Synd.

Cataracts are common at older ages

Tie memories to a chair

Welcome to “Fantasy Island.” Television is overrun with inane

reality shows (most of them scripted) that are anything but reality, and our movie screens are filled with escapist super-hero dramas. There was a time when comedies were filled with humor — not just sexual innuendo — and drama shows were about relationships, not just cops, robbers, DNA, who-dunit or how?

The “Housewives of ...” series have untold cities to go through, as do “CSI,” “NCIS,” “Law & Order,” etc. Small won-der that a show like “Downton Abbey” seems like a breath of fresh air amongst all the debris in TV’s vast wasteland. We were sure television producers were trying to drive us back into movie theaters, but when we got there all we found was total escapism.

Already we’ve had “Oblivion,” “G.I. Joe Retaliation,” “Iron Man 3” and “Star Trek Into Darkness,” and upcoming we can expect “After Earth” (May 31), “Man of Steel” (June 14), “World War Z” (June 21), “The Lone Ranger” (July 3), “Pacific Rim” (July 12), “R.I.P.D.” (July 19), “The Wolverine” (July 26), “Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters” (Aug. 7), “Elysium” (Aug. 29), “Thor: The Dark World” (Nov. 8) and a sequel of “Spawn.”

Where are the classic shows like “I Love Lucy,” “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” and “The Golden Girls,” or epic films like “Gone With the Wind,” “The Ten Commandments,” “Ben

Hur” and “My Fair Lady”? Do all movies have to be in 3D to get us away from our comput-ers and big-screen TVs?

• • •Despite the 2002 Best

Picture Oscar for the film ver-sion, Broadway producers of “Chicago” have kept their show running by constantly adding big names to the show for short runs. The latest star signed is talk-show host and “Dancing With the Stars” celebrity Wendy Williams, who will start her run June 25. Brooke Shields, a former head-liner of the show, will direct “Chicago” at the Hollywood Bowl July 26-28. No cast has yet been named.

• • •The 1955 film “Guys and

Dolls,” which starred Marlon Brando, Frank Sinatra and Jean Simmons (of “Spartacus”), is headed for a remake at 20th Century Fox Studios. Let’s see ... how about George Clooney, Michael Buble and Brittany Spears? LOL.

Also, this summer, NBCUniversal is tearing down The Gibson Amphitheater and Curious George Playland to make room for “The Wizarding World of Harry Potter” theme park at Universal Studios in Hollywood. The project will cost $500 million.

Seems you can’t win because the only way you can get back to reality is to watch the evening news ... but then, right after that, you’re begging for escapism again!

© 2013 King Features Synd., Inc.

Wendy Williams

THURSDAY May 23, 2013TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINC4

Super Crossword & Suduko Puzzle Answersfrom page C2

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Solution #2867-M

7 1 8 4 2 9 3 6 54 5 9 3 1 6 2 7 83 2 6 7 8 5 9 1 45 7 1 2 6 8 4 9 36 4 2 9 3 1 5 8 78 9 3 5 4 7 6 2 1

1 3 4 8 9 2 7 5 69 6 5 1 7 4 8 3 22 8 7 6 5 3 1 4 9

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Solution #2867-D

1 2 7 3 8 9 6 5 46 8 5 4 7 2 3 9 14 9 3 6 5 1 8 2 72 1 8 9 6 7 4 3 57 3 6 5 4 8 9 1 25 4 9 1 2 3 7 6 8

9 7 1 8 3 5 2 4 68 5 4 2 9 6 1 7 33 6 2 7 1 4 5 8 9

Jeep Grand Cherokee now offered with clean diesel power

If I were giving auto manu-facturers awards, Jeep would get a gold star from me for

introducing the 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee Diesel. I think that’s a big, important move for an American manufacturer to make right now.

Jeep mangers say consum-ers have been asking for a die-sel-powered Grand Cherokee. After driving this new Grand Cherokee with its 240 horse-power and 420 lb.-ft. of torque 3.0-liter EcoDiesel V-6, I think this should fill that request very nicely.

A new eight-speed automatic transmission is standard equip-ment for the EcoDiesel engine and all the 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee models including the super high performance SRT. The eight-speed is smoother, shifts faster and helps produce better fuel economy than the previous transmission.

The most important feature of the EcoDiesel is the best in class fuel economy of 22 mpg city and 30 mpg highway fuel economy for the rear drive models (21/28 mpg for four-wheel drive mod-els). Imagine up to 730 miles between fuel stops – it’s going to require a strong bladder to go between stops for fuel. The EcoDiesel accelerates from 0 to 60 mph in an estimated eight seconds, but the massive torque actually makes it feel even more responsive than the numbers indicate. The new engine also has low CO2 emissions.

In addition to the new EcoDiesel, the 2014 Grand Cherokee is available with the award winning 290-hp 3.6-liter Pentastar V-6 engine and 360-hp 5.7-liter V-8 with Variable Valve Timing. For shoppers that are looking for the ultimate Jeep on-road performance there is the SRT model with its 6.4-liter Hemi engine, rated at 470-hp and 465-lb.ft. or torque, but that’s another Jeep story.

Three different four-wheel drive systems are offered on the 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee:

• Quadra-Trac I is a full time system with no switches or levers.

• Quadra-Trac II has a two-speed transfer case, which sends as much as 100 percent of the available torque to the axle with the most traction.

• Quadra-Drive II has an Electronic Limited-slip Differential. It instantly detects slippage and distrib-utes torque to the tires with traction.Quadra-Trac II and Quadra-

Drive II both include the Selec-Terrain system, which allows the driver to select from five differ-ent driving conditions (Sand, Mud, Auto, Snow, and Rock).

Grand Cherokee is also avail-able with the Quadra-Lift air suspension system that has the ability to adjust through five ride height settings to maximize vehicle height for the best off-road (up to 11.3 inches) ground clearance or to lower it for the best aerodynamics.

Obviously, the mechanical changes are the big story for the 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee, but there is also a new level of design and feature refinement.

“With the new 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee, we have taken the industry’s most highly

acclaimed SUV and elevated it to an even higher level,” explains Mike Manley, President and CEO — Jeep Brand, Chrysler Group LLC. “Jeep has proudly separated Grand Cherokee even further from its competitors by enhancing its unique elegance, efficiency, capability and tech-nological features. Consumers will clearly find the new Jeep Grand Cherokee to be even more of a pleasure to drive – on any and all roads, on the most demanding trails, and in all weather conditions.”

The 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee lineup includes

four models: Laredo, Limited, Overland and Summit. Each model is available in rear- or four-wheel drive. Prices range from $29,790, including the destination charge, for the two-wheel drive Laredo up to $51,990 for the Summit 4x4. The EcoDiesel engine is a $4,500 option on the three upper level models and $5,000 on the Summit 4x4. All models are exceptionally well equipped and the Summit has all the available features as standard equipment, except the Blu-ray DVD rear seat entertainment system.

All four 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee models wear a distinc-tive new look with model specif-ic wheels, grille treatments and other alterations. Looking more upscale, each model starts with a shorter version of the Jeep trademark seven-slot grille and trimmer headlights. The result is a buff, shapelier look. The tail-lights are larger and powered by LEDs for quicker and brighter response. The rear has a more aerodynamic spoiler and there is a re-sculpted tailgate with more window area for greater visibil-ity. The three upper level models all have standard dual exhaust tips, too.

The interior is beautiful with rich leathers, subtle wood accents, French stitching, and brushed aluminum style bright-work. Controls are conveniently located and well-marked. The seats with contrasting stitching and piping are nicely bolstered for good support.

The 2014 Jeep Grand

Cherokee models are loaded with impressive new technology. The Uconnect Access system with the 8.4-inch touch screen is one of the best navigation/communication systems I’ve used. The icons are large, eas-ily identifiable and the system doesn’t hesitate when an icon is touched, it jumps. It also has some cool features like a cloud based voice texting so the driver can keep his or her thumbs on the steering wheel where they belong. There’s also a seven-inch multiview screen located in the center of the instrument pod that can be reconfigured to pro-vide information about naviga-tion, audio, trip computer and Selec-Terrain modes.

Some of the features that particularly caught my atten-tion were the integral hitch cover that hides the trailer hitch and the Selec-Speed Control. The speed control works with Hill-descent Control and the new Hill-accent Control allow-ing the driver to change the speed by tapping the steering wheel mounted shift paddles. Incidentally, the paddle shifters are standard on all models.

When it comes to features and luxuries, the upper level 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee models will hold their own against any of the luxury imports. In addi-tion, for off-road prowess, the new Grand Cherokee is all Jeep. Showing that the Trail Rated 4X4 is more than simply a clever marketing tag, the Jeep people found a challenging off-road course at the Inks Ranch near

Llano, Texas in the famous Texas Hill Country.

To see how well the 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee handled off road, we drove through some typical off-road terrain like dry streambeds, over some rocks and other minor challenges, on our way to Watch Mountains’s 300-foot wall of granite. Imagine a humongous chunk of granite with a face that slopes about 55 degrees. The idea was to climb the rock, turn around and drive down.

This was a great place to check out the new drivetrain features. Set the Selec-Terrain to “rock,” set the Selec-Speed Control and all you have to do is steer and make any neces-sary speed adjustments with the paddle shifters. Look mom, no feet — the Jeep walks you up the wall. This wall of granite is so steep the only way to know where you are going is watch the spotters telling you which way to turn. On the way down you are literally hanging from your shoulder harness and looking straight down as the Selec-Speed control eases you off the rock. I felt like Wile E. Coyote dropping off a cliff in slow motion.

It was amazing! — and that’s the perfect description of the 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee.

All three Grand Cherokee powerplants are impressive, but I’m a big new fan of the gold star winning EcoDiesel.

S2512a © Copyright 2013 by Auto Digest

by Barbara & Bill Schaffer

THE RICHARDS GROUP JOB #: BON080034 CLIENT: Ad Council AD: Surprised Baby_NewspaperTRIM: Same as live LIVE: 7.625'' x 5.25" BLEED: N/A LS/COLORS: 100 / BW PUB: TBD INSERTION DATE: TBD FOR QUESTIONS CALL: Todd Gutmann 214-891-3519

The LATCH system makes it easier to be sure your child’s car seat is installed correctly every time. Just clip it to the lower anchors, attach the top tether, and pull the straps tight. To fi nd out more, visit safercar.gov.

BON080034 S_News 7n625x5n25.indd 1 11/26/08 11:57:33 AM

Your Complete Local News Source.

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN C5Thursday May 23, 2013

See our new website at TooeleOnline.com

TooeleOnline.com offers these and many other new features:• View every story from the paper in its entirety in either web format or PDF.• Access thousands of archived stories, columns, photos and more.• Download or print digital copies of the newspaper right from home.• Be sure to tell all your friends about our new website. Have them use the

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The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin has launched an all new website!Check it out at: TooeleOnline.com, TooeleTranscript.com, or TranscriptBulletin.com.

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

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

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NOTICE OF PUBLICATION & DEADLINE CHANGES

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newspaper:

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Take responsibility for the smooth running of our small, dynamic office where your professionalism, initiative and office skills will be welcomed. You will have plenty of room to be creative and management is always open to new ideas. Your part-time role will include providing a full range of office management duties including: • day-to-day running of the office

• administrative support to the Board of Directors

• accounts payable & receivable

• preparation of financial reports

• maintenance of membership records

• other duties as requested.

Office AdministrAtOrPart time - 25 hrs Per wk miN.

Starting salary $12-$13 per hr., depending upon experience.

Please email your resume [email protected] by June 2, 2013

ApplicAnts must hAve:• experience with QuickBooks Version 2009 or higher• experience with Microsoft Word and Excel• knowledge of basic accounting rules• experience with email communication & website management• excellent interpersonal, oral and written communication skills• a positive disposition.• experience with office management protocols

HELP WANTED SalesRepresentative

We are growing and have more work than we can handle and are in need of good people who want a great place to work and a lot of opportunity.

See Frank at Chev or Erik at Ford/Dodge

Ensignal, a premier Verizon Wireless Retailer is seeking motivated, high-energy people to fill communication consultant positions in our Tooele, UT store.Successful candidates will possess excellent sales techniques along with strong customer service skills. Knowledge of the wireless industry and one year prior retail sales experience is a plus. Bilingual preferred. Normal retail hours, along with nights and weekend required. Ensignal offers competitive pay, plus commission, monthly contests and discounted mobile services.Apply online at www.ensignal.com

The Kirk

57 West Vine • Tooele • 882-1372

Quiet, Quality apartments in a restored historic structure

The Best Places at the Best Prices Completely Furnished

Weekly & Monthly Rates

Now RentingIncome Restrictions Apply

Exclusively for SeniorsPet Friendly

Call for details435.843.0717

A House SOLD Name!

435 850.8167435.882.8868ext. 197

A House SOLD Name!

8 COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES AVAILABLE IN COUNTY CALL FOR DETAILS!

UtahHomeownerHelp.com

Do you owe more than your home is worth? Help is available at

$235,000 4 bdrm, 3 bth home on 0.30 ac. New stainless steel appliances & some new fl ooring. Vinyl fence and tons of RV parking! Views all around this beautiful home!

418 S. 800 ETooele

$160,000 5 bedroom 3 bath home with a fenced back yard and 2 car garage! This home was the former model home and has lots of nice extras! Cute, clean, and move in ready!

676 Hidden River TrailTooele

$85,000 This one’s a gem! Cute 2 bedrom 1 bath with all of the updating done! Smooth top range, jetted tub, new roof, siding, driveway, 2-pane windows, newer paint and carpet and more! Single level living and a large back yard!

429 N BrookTooele

Andrea Cahoon

$160,000 5 bedroom 3 bath home with a fenced back yard and 2 car garage! This home was the former model home and has lots of nice extras! Cute,

UnderContract

$130,000 - SHORT SALE3 bedroom 2 bath home with 2 car garage. Newer carpet, fenced yard, great northeast location and lots of potential!

456 Chelsie WayTooele

$85,000 This one’s a gem! Cute 2 bedrom 1 bath with all of the updating done! Smooth top range, jetted tub, new roof, siding, driveway, 2-pane windows, newer paint and

UnderContract

Spring into a New Home!

$200,000 4 bedroom, 3 bath rambler on corner lot in Overlake. Hardwood fl ooring & new stain-less steel appliances. Gas log fi replace and fi nished basement.

1932 N 370 WestTooele

$292,000 Gorgeous inside & out! 6 bedroom 3 1/2 bath on a 0.25 corner lot. All fi nished & classy! Plantation shut-ters, granite counters, 2 furnaces & a/c units,storage shed, RV parking & MUCH more!

178 W NauticalStansbury

$200,000 4 bedroom, 3 bath rambler on corner lot in Overlake. Hardwood fl ooring & new stain-less steel appliances. Gas log

UnderContract

$165,000 4 bedroom 3 bath all brick rambler with an oversized 2 car garage. This home is a one-owner wonder! You will love all of the storage, the large rooms, and the covered patio!

121 N PinehurstStansbury

Services

ALTERATIONSand AWARD WINNING

TAILORINGby

KATHY JONES

882-6605

DumpsterRental

1500 W. Atlas Way (Utah Industrial Depot)

435-882-2222 www.greenboxrecycling.com

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AERATION, POWERRAKING, mowing, till-ing, Top soil, mulch,manure, sand, riverrock & gravel.� Hauling/clean up.� Call John(435)882-7877

CALL JOE(801)895-6237

Bill ProfessionalLandscaping/ Concrete

Driveways, retainingwalls. Any wall,

Stamped concrete.Hauling, tree trimming,sod. Free Estimates.

WALDEN LAWN Care.For your lawn careneeds give us a call lowrates, free estimates,se abla espanol(435)849-3988

Services

CUSTOM CONCRETEOver 45yrs experi-ence. Licensed andinsured. Free esti-mates. Call Tyson(435)849-3374

ELECTRICIAN/ 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!

PROFESSIONALPAINTING done for thebest price in town! CallJeremy (435)849-5334

GARCIAS. For all yourconstruction needs.Licensed & insuredfor over 40 years. Nojobs too small. CallTyson (435)849-3374

HANDYMAN. Tree trim-ming, sprinklers, yardwork. Residential andbusiness. Call Jimmy at(435)224-0000

HAULING: Sand, gravel,top soil, lime finds, etc.(435)249-1316 or(435)224-2653

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

NEED A PAINTER? Lo-cal professional painterGREAT prices Li-censed Serving Tooele& SL areas Call forf ree est imate JJ(801)631-5757

Services

CLEANING: Local, 18yrsin business, references,efficient, honest, de-pendable. Free Esti-m a t e s . W e e k l y ,Bi-weekly, occasional,gift certificates. Call(801)910-0222

PRIVATE TUTORING.I am a certifiedteacher with 20yrs ex-perience. Now offer-ing Back To Schoolspecials! All ages/subjects. Call Angela(435)882-2733(435)496-0590

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

CONCRETE REPAIRConcrete lifting and voidlifting,�crack and jointsealing,�concrete densi-fier�to stop and preventspalling/scaling.� LiftRight Concrete LLC801-870-3691.

Miscellaneous

CLARINET FOR Sale.Leblanc Vito Classic7242 with new pads.Excellent condition.Perfect for the begin-ner. $295 or best offer(New retail value over$700). Call 435-840-1288.

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

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

STEER MANURE inStockton. Free if youload. If we load $10 ford i e s e l . C a l l(435)830-9625 or(435)882-2649

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

Miscellaneous

WOOD CLARINET ForSale. Semi professionalLeb lanc CadenzaP1813 designed by Ba-con. Like new. Used 1year. Perfect for highschool intermediate andadvanced players.Great sound. 2 differentbarrels included as wellas clarinet stand, back-pack case and cleaningkit. (New retail value$2390) Only $900. Call435-840-1288

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 . 830 -3225 ,843-9154.

SOFA, green w/multicolor cushions, 95” long$85; console TV, Mitsu-b ish i 46” $100.(435)884-0315

WHITE KENMORE frontload washer and elec-t r i c dyer mode l402.4903 and 402.8903in good condit ion$600.00 OBO call(435)882-5121

Garage, Yard Sales

GRANTSVILLE 345West Peach, SaturdayMay 25, 7am to ?.Huge yard sale tools,bikes, camping, fishing,household, clothes,movies. Something foreveryone cash only.

GRANTSVILLE, 141 EM a i n , S a t u r d a y ,8am-2pm. Communityyard & bake sale.

GRANTSVILLE, 235 WDurfee St, Saturday,May 25, 8am-5pm.

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

TOOELE 404 Ameri-can Way Saturdayand Sunday. 7am-?Huge yard sale! Lotsof misc. items, this isa must see!

TOOELE 60 s 100 wSaturday 8am-1pm.Couches, desk, tables,collectable glassware,kitchenware, movingboxes and much more!

TOOELE, 1072 N 490 E,Saturday, 9am. FundRaiser. Small trampo-line, fire fighter collecti-bles, canning jars,handmade porcelaindolls, china set, etc.

TOOELE, 244 S 5thStreet, Friday, Satur-day, 8am-5pm. Clothesand misc.

TOOELE, 278 W 1430N, Friday and Saturday,8am-1pm. Furniture,vintage coat, kidsclothes, household,misc.

TOOELE, 281 N 100 E,Friday, 9:30am-? Miscitems.

Garage, Yard Sales

TOOELE, 347 AntelopeAve, Saturday, 9am-4pm. Collectible Bar-bies to the kitchen sink!

TOOELE, 550 SeagullDrive, Friday, Saturday,Monday, 8am-4pm.Kitchen, clothes, dish-washer, misc.

TOOELE, 595 E 670 N,Fridays, Saturdays,8am-1pm. Last week-end! Huge multi familyyard sale. New stuffevery day. Toys, furni-ture, clothing, shoes,vintage jewelry, house-hold and more.

TOOELE, 626 BlueridgeDr i ve , Sa tu rday ,9am-3pm. Multi familyyard sale. Somethingfor everyone! Priced tomove.

TOOELE, 982 Fox Run,Saturday, 8am-1pm.Clothing, toys, furniture,household items, col-lectibles, yard equip-ment. Multi family.

Pets

Pampered Pet ResortQuality pet care for

over 30 years.Dog & Cat boarding

435-884-3374pamperedpetresort.com

ADORABLE KITTENSand mini-adult cats foradoption. Please call435-882-2667 for moreinformation.

DOG GROOMING Safe, clean,professional.

Rockstar Backstage.(435)843-8700

FOUND but cannotkeep: Very friendly andloveable long hair or-ange and white tabbycat. Found near Cole-man Street. Needs al o v i n g h o m e .(435)833-9474

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

Pets

FREE ADORABLE,Playful kittens to a goodhome! (435)882-8375

RUSH LAKE KENNELS.

Dog & Cat boarding,obedience training.Call (435)882-5266

rushlakekennels.com

Livestock

FOR LEASE: 108 acrefenced pasture, no wa-ter, $12 per head for3mo. (435)843-1707

PAPERED QUARTERhorse, sorrell gelding,4yrs old well broke,gentle, needs ridingand handling, nicehorse. Asking $500(435)830-2309(435)837-2246

PASTURE & CLUBLambs ready. Good se-lection available. Ewe &weather lambs, docked,shots, $150 each. CallGarth (435)837-2246(435)830-2309

Sporting Goods

SELLING YOUR moun-tain bike? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 www.tooeletranscript.com

Personals

ADOPT: A creative, pro-fessional couple longfor 1st baby. Sailing,beaches, gourmetmeals await! Expensespaid 1-800-379-8418Christi & Peter.

SELL YOUR CAR orboat in the classifieds.Call 882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com or e-mail your adto [email protected]

Child Care

Castle Creek Kids Activ-ity Center. Now enroll-ing for SUMMERCAMPS, Tae Kwon Do,Dance, Tumbl ing,Chi ldcare, BounceHouses and More! Re-serve your child's spotnow. Ages 2-13yrs,Check us out at: castle-c reekk ids .com or(435)849-7147

ENROLL NOW for fall.Busy Bee Preschool inStansbury Park. Mon-day & Wednesday9:30am-12pm, $50/mo.C a l l C h r i s t i n a(435)882-2560(435)496-3607

NEW BEGINNINGSPRESCHOOL nowenroll ing for the2013-14 school year.�Summer & Fal lClasses. Instructors:Crystal Lawrence,Heather Lawrence,Brooke Castagno.�Cal l now (435)882-0209 to reserveyour child's place.20yrs experience!

Help Wanted

A CUT ABOVE Hair styl-ist needed. Well estab-lished busy salon. Con-t a c t C a m i l l e(435)840-2816

CARRIERS NEEDEDStansbury , E rda ,Grantsville early morn-ing delivery. Call now tostart earning money.(435)496-0138

DRIVERS: SIGN-ONBONUS, Great Pay,Benefits! No-TouchFreight. Weekly Pay.CDL-A w/3yrs OTRExp. Wild West Ex-press: 1-877-212-8703

EXPERIENCED COOKSupervisor. Must haveclean criminal recordand pass drug screen-ing. Working for correc-tions. Weekends amust. Must be over 21.Apply at Tooele CountyJai l Contact Lisa(435)277-4219

LOADER Operator forGrantsville Pit. Need 3years loader experi-ence for operator,crushing and MSHAtraining preferred.�Go tohadcoconstruction.com/careers Or fax resumeto 801-766-7604

IMMEDIATE OPENING.Skilled auto mechanic,must have own tools.Apply in person. TooeleRV & Auto Repair.

Full time Photo Editorwanted for immediateopening. The TooeleTranscript-Bulletin, anaward-winning twice-weekly newspaper inTooele County, seeks amulti-talented full-timechief photographer/photo editor. Responsi-bilities include: Photo-graph newspaper as-signments. Edit andprepare images forprint. Collaborate, or-ganize and maintaincommunication withwriters on their assign-ments. Develop and su-pervise a small networkof freelance photogra-phers and an occa-sional high school in-tern. Manage photo ar-chive. Other duties asassigned. Ideal candi-dates will be resource-ful, proactive, organizedand a college graduate.A high level of profi-ciency required inCanon cameras andlenses, Adobe softwareand Apple computers.Please send your re-sume, references,cover letter detailingsalary requirementsand portfolio to: Mae-gan Burr [email protected] &Dave Bern: [email protected] 58North Main StreetTooele, UT 84074

Help Wanted

Full time Photo Editorwanted for immediateopening. The TooeleTranscript-Bulletin, anaward-winning twice-weekly newspaper inTooele County, seeks amulti-talented full-timechief photographer/photo editor. Responsi-bilities include: Photo-graph newspaper as-signments. Edit andprepare images forprint. Collaborate, or-ganize and maintaincommunication withwriters on their assign-ments. Develop and su-pervise a small networkof freelance photogra-phers and an occa-sional high school in-tern. Manage photo ar-chive. Other duties asassigned. Ideal candi-dates will be resource-ful, proactive, organizedand a college graduate.A high level of profi-ciency required inCanon cameras andlenses, Adobe softwareand Apple computers.Please send your re-sume, references,cover letter detailingsalary requirementsand portfolio to: Mae-gan Burr [email protected] &Dave Bern: [email protected] 58North Main StreetTooele, UT 84074

Wanted

I WILL come to you andpay cash for your junkc a r o r t r u c k .(435)830-5987

Autos

LOCAL, LICENSED andBonded auto recyclerpaying cash for junkcars and trucks. Call(435)830-2394

SELL YOUR CAR orboat in the classifieds.Call 882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

S E L L I N G Y O U RHOME? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 or visi twww.tooeletranscript.com

THURSDAY May 23, 2013C6

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Sandra Larsen REAL ESTATE 435.224.9186

LAND

347 S BELAIRE CIR • G-VILLE

ONLY $145,000Very nice rambler in great shape!! New roof,New counter tops, kitchen sink, New bathroom. Central air. Lovely brick gasfi replace. Mature yard with 2

large sheds. Full auto sprinklers. CLEAN!

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. (Residential 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

782 E CLIFFORD DR

ONLY $225,000Great home in established neighborhood. 6

bedrooms, 4 bathrooms, main fl oor laundry, 75 gallon water heater, large storageroom. Large .28 acre lot.Extra deep garage with nice R.V. parking.

RURAL HOUSING 100% FINANCING STILL AVAILABLE IN TOOELE CITY ! NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY & SELL!

145,000145,000Very nice rambler in great shape!! New roof,New counter tops, kitchen sink, New bathroom. Central

UnderContract

430 CANYON CIR • TOOELE

ONLY $115,000CLEAN rambler with 3 bedrooms. Remodeled

bathroom with jetted tub and double sink.Nice two tone paint. 1 car garage. Close to

elementary school.

ONLY $118,000Remodeled w/new kitchen cabinets & counter

tops. New paint & carpet. Main living is 2 bdrm & 1 bath. Mother in law apt- 1 bdrm & 1 full bath. Separate meters for utilities. Zoned commercial.

67 W UTAH AVE • TOOELE

ONLY $235,000Looking for a beautifully updated home and a place to run a home business? Detached shop could be retail, day care,

preschool,dance studio etc. Has it’s own bathroom and kitchen. Home has new HUGE kitchen, updated bathrooms. Large master/fi replace. Must see photo tour and in person!

163 E 100 S • TOOELE

ONLY $90,000Very well taken care of home. Cute as cute!

Huge detached garage! .24 acre lot with full auto sprinklers. Fully fenced! Perfect

for investor or fi rst time home buyer!

102 N 5TH ST • TOOELE

ONLY $132,000Updated, open fl oor plan. Newer windows,

roof, furnace, carpet paint, Updated kitchen & baths. 2 separate detached

garages. Close to schools.

155 W 100 S • TOOELE

ONLY ONLY ONLY $90,00090,000Very well taken care of home. Cute as cute!

UnderContract

ONLY $103,000Cute, clean home in nice neighborhood close to all schools! Wood burning fi replace to warm you on a chilly night. Hardwoodfl oors. Back yard is fully fenced to keep in the pets or the little ones!

249 S 320 WEST • TOOELE249 S 320 WEST • TOOELEPrice ReducedIt’s beautiful

house hunting

weather. Call

me today!

Tooele Valley Homes & Lots!

Call Laramie Dunn for ALL your Real Estate needsCall Laramie Dunn for ALLunn for ALLunn f your Real Estate needs435-224-4000

435-849-5914

Call Laramie or MarkTooele County’s Real Estate Specialists

Laramie Dunn Mark Dunn

75 W. 1680 N., Tooele

VVery well kept home in a beautiful locaery well kept home in a beautiful locaVery well kept home in a beautiful locaVVery well kept home in a beautiful locaV -tion. !"##$%#&'()*&+,(%-&*.%$&/(0%%1+,'%233/%

+#&'%4567%&'%389*,%&'(%83/:&#%(5'5';%/33:0%<&/;,%-/5;76%:&)6,/%)"56,0%$249,900249,900

827 S. Deer Hollow Rd., Tooele

Beautiful East Bench HomeBeautiful East Bench Home=%-,(/33:)>%?%-&67/33:)>%)+&*53")%:&)6,/%

)"56,>%&:&@5';%3+,'%233/%+#&'>%3+,'%#386>%67,&6,/%/33:>%389*,0%=AB=%)C0%860

1728 N. Colavito, Tooele

Great home with 6 beds and 4 baths.Great home with 6 beds and 4 baths.D5*,%#&'()*&+,(%+/3+,/6$%4567%;/,&6%+&6530%E&5'%

233/%:&)6,/%-,(/33:%4567%F/&'(%:&)6,/%-&670%!"##$%9'5)7,(%-&),:,'6G%%$

233/%:&)6,/%-,(/33:%4567%F/&'(%:&)6,/%-&670%!"##$%$

233/%:&)6,/%-,(/33:%4567%F/&'(%:&)6,/%-&670%!"##$%

199,000199,000

!!"#$%#&'(()*+,-#./+%0#$'-1

Beautiful Home on 5 Beautiful Home on 5 Acres Horse Prop.Acres Horse Prop.=%-,(/33:)>%B0?%-&67/33:)>%H%.56*7,')>%#&/;,%67,&6,/%/33:0:???I%)C0%860%%%%$569,900

454 E. 670 N., Tooele

New Listing - WJ%-,()>%H%-&67)>%&%#3K,#$%*3"'6/$%.56*7,'>%&%83/:&#%

#5K5';%&'(%(5'5';%/33:0%%% 169,900

90 S. Deseret Cir, Grantsville

Nice Cozy HomeB%-,()>%H%-&67)0%L,/$%'5*,%&##%-/5*.%73:,%4567%B%-,()>%H%-&67)0%L,/$%'5*,%&##%-/5*.%73:,%4567%B%-,()>%H%-&67)0%L

&%#&/;,%-&*.$&/(0%%$194,900

55 E. Main, Ophir

Amazing Home in OphirAmazing Home in OphirB%-,(/33:)>%H%8&:5#$%/33:)0%M,&##$%-,&"658"#0

5509 N. Windsor Way, Stansbury

Great Great Rambler in fabulous neighborhoodB%-,(/33:)>%H%-&67/33:)>%-5;%3+,'%233/%

+#&'0%E")6%N,,GG%$219,900

1183 N 690 E, Tooele

NEW LISTING - NEW LISTING - O7&6%&%-,&"658"#%73:,0%PQ*,##,'6%#&'()*&+5';0%1+,'%#3K,#$%233/%+#&'0%

R75)%5)%&%:")6%),,0%%$259,900

454 E. 670 N., Tooele

New Listing - WNew Listing - Warm and Cozy Homearm and Cozy HomeJ%-,()>%H%-&67)>%&%#3K,#$%*3"'6/$%.56*7,'>%&%83/:&#%

#5K5';%&'(%(5'5';%/33:0%%%$169,900

454 E. 670 N., T

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Under454 E. 670 N., Tooele454 E. 670 N., T

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CCCCCCCCCNew Listing - WCNew Listing - WNew Listing - WCNew Listing - WJ%-,()>%H%-&67)>%&%#3K,#$%*3"'6/$%.56*7,'>%&%83/:&#%CJ%-,()>%H%-&67)>%&%#3K,#$%*3"'6/$%.56*7,'>%&%83/:&#%CNew Listing - WCNew Listing - WJ%-,()>%H%-&67)>%&%#3K,#$%*3"'6/$%.56*7,'>%&%83/:&#%CJ%-,()>%H%-&67)>%&%#3K,#$%*3"'6/$%.56*7,'>%&%83/:&#%CJ%-,()>%H%-&67)>%&%#3K,#$%*3"'6/$%.56*7,'>%&%83/:&#%CJ%-,()>%H%-&67)>%&%#3K,#$%*3"'6/$%.56*7,'>%&%83/:&#%

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J%-,()>%H%-&67)>%&%#3K,#$%*3"'6/$%.56*7,'>%&%83/:&#%on

J%-,()>%H%-&67)>%&%#3K,#$%*3"'6/$%.56*7,'>%&%83/:&#%onontrtrtrtrtracacactttttttttt

HotHomesUtah.com

Open House

www.whosyouragent.com

Sat • May 25 • 11aM - 1pM

44 N Race StGRaNStville

$149,900

Bring the Kids and meet Whooty the Owl.

877.570.3321

Trucks

1985 DODGE Pickup 4wheel dirve, stepside,good condition, 2ndowner, $1000 obo.50,000 miles on remanengine. (435)241-8564

Apartments for Rent

1BDRM BASEMENTapartment, utilities in-cluded. $425/mo plus$100/dep. For info call(435)882-2062

1BDRM BASEMENTapartment. Quiet neigh-borhood W/D, utilitiespaid, wifi, satellite TV.$550/mo, $575/fur-nished $400/dep. Nopets. Reference re-quired (435)882-6141

1BDRM, darling windowseats, updated kitchen,pantry, quiet, tile/ hard-wood, carport avail,credit/ backgroundcheck required, $545/mo, $400/dep, VineStreet Courtyard, 34 WVine St, Tooele.(801)205-3883 www.vinestreetcourtyard.com

1BDRM, utilities, w/d in-cluded, ac, no smoking,drinking, drugs, pets.$675/mo, $500/dep.References. Available6/1/13. 1yr lease.(435)840-4253

2 AND 3bdrm apart-ments behind SuperWal-Mart. Swimmingpool, hot tub, exerciseroom, playground, fullclubhouse. 843-4400

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.

2BDRM 2BTH newly up-dated, backgroundcheck and deposit re-qu i red . $800 /mo.(435)830-6990

2BDRM BasementApartment, 404 E UtahAve, w/d hookups,$695mo, includes utili-ties. Available June 1st.Call (801)518-8670

3BDRM Basement ,kitchen, w/d hookups,garage, gas fireplace,garden, $650/mo. 34 NG l e n w o o d A v e ,(801)201-2952

429 N 100 W, 2bdrm up-s ta i r s apa r tmen t$585/mo plus utilities,basement apartment$550/mo plus utilities.Available June 1st. Call(801)518-8670

DEADLINES FOR clas-sifieds ads are Mondayand Wednesdays by4:45 p.m.

Apartments for Rent

COME IN Today andfind your next apart-ment home at The Wil-lows Apartments! Witha discounted depositour rate can't be beat.Call Whitley today fora n a p p o i n t m e n t435-884-6211

NICE APARTMENT 20South 6th Street,Tooele, By East Ele-mentary and OquirrhHi l ls Schools. Infour-p lex bu i ld ingw/on-site laundry. Wa-ter, sewer, garbage in-cluded in rent. $675/mo(801)792-8412

SETTLEMENT CAN-YON APARTMENTSBrand new market 2 &3 bedroom apts. Pricesstarting at $840. CallDanielle (435)882-6112for info.

TOOELE 2BDRM 1bthbasement apartment w/laundry room and hook-ups. Recently updated,big yard with room forgarden. No smoking, nodrinking, no drugs, nopets. $600/mo includesgas and water. Call435-882-6797

Homes for Rent

WHY RENT When YouCan Buy? Zero down& Low Income pro-grams, 1st time & Sin-gle parent programs,Berna Sloan (435)840-5029 Group 1

2BDRM, central air, w/d,dishwasher, yard, gar-den, garage. $870/mo.34 N Glenwood Ave,Tooele. (801)201-2952

3088 W Rim Rock,Stockton South Rim.3bdrm, 2bth. Beautifulhome on a large lot.$1295/mo. A must see.Pics, Details, Addi-tional Info, & to Applyvisit www.WMGUtah.com. 435-849-5826.

3BDRM $815/mo. Newkitchen, floor, and paint.Great Value. 785 W880 S, #B (lower),Tooele. Avl 5/28/13.Picts, details, & apply atWMGUtah.com.435-849-5826.�

3BDRM, 1BTH, ac, utili-ties included $950/mo,$600/dep. (435)840-4529

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

HOMES available to pur-chase for LOW IN-COME buyers withgood credit.� BernaSloan (435)840-5029Group 1 Real Estate.

HAVING A yard sale?Advertise in the Tran-script

Homes for Rent

HOUSE FOR rent 229North 7th Street,2bdrm, 1bth, new paint,new carpet. No pets, nosmoking. $825/mo. Call(435)830-5341

NICE TOOELE 3bdrm,2bth, washer/ dryer, 2car garage, RV parking,new carpet. Utilities in-cluded. $1250/mo. CallTravis (801)232-2166

STANSBURY PARKLarge 4bdrm, 3bthrambler, central ac,

2 car garage, finishedbasement. $1395/mo5469 N Geneva Way

(off Village Blvd 165 E)Davidson Realty

(801)466-5078www.dripm.com

STANSBURY PARKNewer water f ront ,3300sqft, 6bdrm, 4bth,fireplace, gardner in-cluded, deck. Finishedbasement. Mountainviews. $1695/mo(435)830-3120(310)779-3726

TOOELE, 1bdrm 1bthcottage style house,hookups, $550/mo

136 N 4th Street -REARDavidson Realty Inc

(801)466-5078www.dripm.com

TOOELE, 3BDRM, 3bthcottage, 2 car garage,finished basement, w/d

included, $995/mo.178 N Greystone Way

650 E Oquirrh CottagesDavidson Realty Inc

(801)466-5078www.dripm.com

WHY RENT when youcan buy? Call for afree pre approval Me-lanie 840-3073 Secu-rity National Mort-gage.

Homes

$$SAVE MONEYSearch Bank & HUDhomes www.TooeleBankHomes.comBerna Sloan (435)840-5029 Group 1

FOR SALE By Owner,this is not a short sell.The home is located at342 Noble Road, it hasa fenced in spaciousyard w/scenic mountainviews. The home is1810sqft, 4bdrm, 13/4bth $143,500. Fullsprinkler system, pergolaminate floors and tilein the living room andhallway, central air, 2car garage, it is withinwalking distance toOquirrh Hil ls GolfCourse. Please call ortext to set up an ap-pointment to see thehome. 435-850-9665

Homes

FSBO 3BDRM, 2.5bth,family, and living roomw/upstairs loft, nicelylandcaped w/full vinylfence. 537 East 700North, Tooele. Pam(435)850-8516

S E L L I N G Y O U RHOME? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 or visi twww.tooeletranscript.com

Mobile Homes

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

TRAILER SPACESavailable at HenwoodMobile Park 250 W 500N. Call (435)249-0661or (435)882-6642

Water Shares

FOR SALE 1.3 shares ofMiddle Canyon irriga-tion water. Make offer(435)882-1604

MIDDLE CANYON Wa-ter Share. One Share"Series A" Middle Can-yon Water. $2500OBO. 435-882-0449

SETTLEMENT CanyonWater Shares for sale.$2800 obo each. Call(435)840-0148 -Dan

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

NOTICE AND AGENDANOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN THAT THETOOELE COUNTYBOARD OF HEALTHWILL HOLD A REGU-LAR MEETING ONTUESDAY MAY 28,2013 AT 7:00 P.M. AT151 NORTH MAINSTREET, SUITE 280,TOOELE, UTAH1. Welcome and Ap-proval of Minutes2. Health Officer's Re-port3. Environmental HealthUpdate4. Accreditation StatusUpdate5. Abolish Health Regu-lation #17, “SyntheticCannabinoids”6. Family & School Nurs-ing/Aging Update7. Community Services/Emergency Manage-ment Update8. Live Fit Coalition Up-date9. HazMat Fee Schedule10. Board Member Com-ments/ Concerns11. Adjourn12. Executive SessionMYRON BATEMANHealth OfficerIf you desire special ac-commodation under theAmericans With Disabili-ties Act, please contactTooele County's ADACoordinator, Pam Ayala,(435) 843-3157, withinthree working days priorto this meeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 23 &28, 2013)

Public Notices Meetings

NOTICE AND AGENDANOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN THAT THETOOELE COUNTYBOARD OF HEALTHWILL HOLD A REGU-LAR MEETING ONTUESDAY MAY 28,2013 AT 7:00 P.M. AT151 NORTH MAINSTREET, SUITE 280,TOOELE, UTAH1. Welcome and Ap-proval of Minutes2. Health Officer's Re-port3. Environmental HealthUpdate4. Accreditation StatusUpdate5. Abolish Health Regu-lation #17, “SyntheticCannabinoids”6. Family & School Nurs-ing/Aging Update7. Community Services/Emergency Manage-ment Update8. Live Fit Coalition Up-date9. HazMat Fee Schedule10. Board Member Com-ments/ Concerns11. Adjourn12. Executive SessionMYRON BATEMANHealth OfficerIf you desire special ac-commodation under theAmericans With Disabili-ties Act, please contactTooele County's ADACoordinator, Pam Ayala,(435) 843-3157, withinthree working days priorto this meeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 23 &28, 2013)

NOTICE OF PUBLICHEARING ON PRO-POSAL TO AMENDTHE TOWN OF RUSHVALLEY'S LAND USEREGULATIONSPursuant to Sections10-9a-502 and 503 ofthe Utah Code, notice ishereby given that theRush Valley Town Plan-ning Commission, willhold a public hearing onJune 12, 2013 at 7:00p.m. at the Rush ValleyTown Hall, 52 SouthPark Street, Rush Val-ley, Utah, to consider aproposed amendment tothe Rush Valley LandUse Management andDevelopment Code. Theproposed amendmentwould specify the re-quirements to constructroads associated withdevelopment activitiesincluding subdivisionsand when constructingsingle family dwellingson unimproved roads.Interested persons areinvited to attend and givecomment on this pro-posal.In compliance with theAmericans with DisabilityAct, the Town of RushValley will accommodatereasonable requests toassist persons with dis-abilities to participate inPublic Hearings. Re-quests for assistancemay be made by callingAmie Russell at (435)837-2118 at least 3 daysin advance of a meeting.Dated this 20th day ofMay 2013.BY AMIE RUSSELLRUSH VALLEY TOWNCLERK(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 23,2013)

Public Notices Meetings

NOTICE OF PUBLICHEARING ON PRO-POSAL TO AMENDTHE TOWN OF RUSHVALLEY'S LAND USEREGULATIONSPursuant to Sections10-9a-502 and 503 ofthe Utah Code, notice ishereby given that theRush Valley Town Plan-ning Commission, willhold a public hearing onJune 12, 2013 at 7:00p.m. at the Rush ValleyTown Hall, 52 SouthPark Street, Rush Val-ley, Utah, to consider aproposed amendment tothe Rush Valley LandUse Management andDevelopment Code. Theproposed amendmentwould specify the re-quirements to constructroads associated withdevelopment activitiesincluding subdivisionsand when constructingsingle family dwellingson unimproved roads.Interested persons areinvited to attend and givecomment on this pro-posal.In compliance with theAmericans with DisabilityAct, the Town of RushValley will accommodatereasonable requests toassist persons with dis-abilities to participate inPublic Hearings. Re-quests for assistancemay be made by callingAmie Russell at (435)837-2118 at least 3 daysin advance of a meeting.Dated this 20th day ofMay 2013.BY AMIE RUSSELLRUSH VALLEY TOWNCLERK(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 23,2013)

PUBLIC MEETING &HEARING NOTICEThe Tooele County Plan-ning Commission willhold a Public Meeting/Hearing on June 5, 2013at 7:00 p.m. in the Audi-torium at the TooeleCounty Building, 47South Main, Tooele,Utah to consider the fol-lowing items:Public Meeting1. Approval of MeetingMinutes from May 1,20132. CUP-2013-3 Homebased Business, John-son Quality Air, locatedat 8244 Mountain ViewRoad in Lake Point3. CUP-2013-4 Condi-tional Use Permit for aconstruction debris land-fill, located in the 5 milespass area north of StateRoad 734. SUB-2013-2 Prelimi-nary and Final Plats forNorthport Village, Phase1, a 20 lot subdivision,located south of and ad-jacent to State Road138, west of DelgadaLane5. SUB-2013-3 Prelimi-nary Plat for The Re-serve Subdiv is ion,Phase 1, located southof and adjacent to BatesCanyon Road, west ofState Road 36Public Hearing6. LUO-2013-01 LandUse Ordinance Amend-ment - Establishing aLarge Wind Energy Sys-tems Ordinance7. REZ-2013-3 Requestto Rezone approximately80 acres from MultipleUse 40 acre minimum(MU-40) to Mining,Quarry, Sand and GravelExcavation (MG-EX), lo-cated southwest ofBauer Road and north,of but not including theStockton BarFor questions please callthe County Planningstaff (435) 843-3160Dated this 16th day ofMay, 2013Kerry Beutler, CountyPlannerTooele County Plan-ning Commission(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 23,2013)

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

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, June 10,2013, at the hour of 9:30a.m. of that day for thepurpose of foreclosing adeed of trust originallyexecuted by Daniel LeeAutry, in favor of TooeleFederal Credit Union,covering real property lo-cated at approximately1034 East BrookfieldAvenue, Erda, TooeleCounty, Utah, and moreparticularly described as:LOT 46, BROOKFIELDESTATES SUBDIVI-SION PHASE 3, AC-CORDING TO THE OF-F I C I A L P L A TTHEREOF, ON FILEAND OF RECORD INTHE TOOELE COUNTYRECORDER'S OFFICE.15-052-0-0046The 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 Dan-iel Lee Autry and CarolAutry. The trustee's saleof the aforedescribedreal property will bemade without warrantyas to title, possession, orencumbrances. Biddersmust be prepared to ten-der $20,000.00 in certi-fied funds at the saleand the balance of thepurchase price in certi-fied funds by 10:00 a.m.the following businessday. The trustee re-serves the right to voidthe effect of the trustee'ssale after the sale basedupon information un-known to the trustee atthe time of the sale, suchas a bankruptcy filing, aloan reinstatement, or anagreement between thetrustor and beneficiary topostpone or cancel thesale. If so voided, theonly recourse of thehighest bidder is to re-ceive a full refund of themoney paid to the trus-tee. THIS IS AN AT-TEMPT TO COLLECT ADEBT. ANY INFORMA-TION OBTAINED WILLBE USED FOR THATPURPOSE.DATED this 8th day ofMay, 2013Marlon 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. 44081-103(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 9, 16& 23, 2013)

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, June 10,2013, at the hour of 9:30a.m. of that day for thepurpose of foreclosing adeed of trust originallyexecuted by Daniel LeeAutry, in favor of TooeleFederal Credit Union,covering real property lo-cated at approximately1034 East BrookfieldAvenue, Erda, TooeleCounty, Utah, and moreparticularly described as:LOT 46, BROOKFIELDESTATES SUBDIVI-SION PHASE 3, AC-CORDING TO THE OF-F I C I A L P L A TTHEREOF, ON FILEAND OF RECORD INTHE TOOELE COUNTYRECORDER'S OFFICE.15-052-0-0046The 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 Dan-iel Lee Autry and CarolAutry. The trustee's saleof the aforedescribedreal property will bemade without warrantyas to title, possession, orencumbrances. Biddersmust be prepared to ten-der $20,000.00 in certi-fied funds at the saleand the balance of thepurchase price in certi-fied funds by 10:00 a.m.the following businessday. The trustee re-serves the right to voidthe effect of the trustee'ssale after the sale basedupon information un-known to the trustee atthe time of the sale, suchas a bankruptcy filing, aloan reinstatement, or anagreement between thetrustor and beneficiary topostpone or cancel thesale. If so voided, theonly recourse of thehighest bidder is to re-ceive a full refund of themoney paid to the trus-tee. THIS IS AN AT-TEMPT TO COLLECT ADEBT. ANY INFORMA-TION OBTAINED WILLBE USED FOR THATPURPOSE.DATED this 8th day ofMay, 2013Marlon 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. 44081-103(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 9, 16& 23, 2013)

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, June 10,2013, at the hour of 9:30a.m. of that day for thepurpose of foreclosing adeed of trust originallyexecuted by Daniel LeeAutry, in favor of TooeleFederal Credit Union,covering real property lo-cated at approximately1034 East BrookfieldAvenue, Erda, TooeleCounty, Utah, and moreparticularly described as:LOT 46, BROOKFIELDESTATES SUBDIVI-SION PHASE 3, AC-CORDING TO THE OF-F I C I A L P L A TTHEREOF, ON FILEAND OF RECORD INTHE TOOELE COUNTYRECORDER'S OFFICE.15-052-0-0046The 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 Dan-iel Lee Autry and CarolAutry. The trustee's saleof the aforedescribedreal property will bemade without warrantyas to title, possession, orencumbrances. Biddersmust be prepared to ten-der $20,000.00 in certi-fied funds at the saleand the balance of thepurchase price in certi-fied funds by 10:00 a.m.the following businessday. The trustee re-serves the right to voidthe effect of the trustee'ssale after the sale basedupon information un-known to the trustee atthe time of the sale, suchas a bankruptcy filing, aloan reinstatement, or anagreement between thetrustor and beneficiary topostpone or cancel thesale. If so voided, theonly recourse of thehighest bidder is to re-ceive a full refund of themoney paid to the trus-tee. THIS IS AN AT-TEMPT TO COLLECT ADEBT. ANY INFORMA-TION OBTAINED WILLBE USED FOR THATPURPOSE.DATED this 8th day ofMay, 2013Marlon 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. 44081-103(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 9, 16& 23, 2013)

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALE APN: 15-047-0-0013Trust No. 11-00631-8Ref: DEBRA DONO-HOE IMPORTANT NO-TICE TO PROPERTYOWNER YOU ARE INDEFAULT UNDER ADEED OF TRUST datedSeptember 7, 2006. UN-LESS YOU TAKE AC-TION TO PROTECTYOUR PROPERTY, ITMAY BE SOLD AT APUBLIC SALE. IF YOUNEED AN EXPLANA-TION OF THIS PRO-C E E D I N G , Y O USHOULD CONTACT ALAWYER. On June 11,2013 at 4:30 p.m.,James H. Woodall, asduly appointed Trusteeunder a Deed of Trustrecorded on September21, 2006, as Entry No.268014, of the official re-cords in the office at theCounty Recorder ofTOOELE County, Stateof Utah executed by DE-BRA DONOHOE WILLSELL AT PUBLIC AUC-TION TO HIGHEST BID-DER, PAYABLE INLAWFUL MONEY OFTHE UNITED STATESAT THE TIME OF SALE.SUCCESSFUL BID-DERS MUST TENDERA DEPOSIT OF $20,000IN CERTIFIED FUNDSTO THE TRUSTEE ATTHE TIME OF SALE,WITH THE BALANCEDUE BY NOON THEFOLLOWING BUSI-NESS DAY, AT THEOFFICE OF THE TRUS-TEE. AT THE MAIN EN-TRANCE TO THETOOELE COUNTY DIS-TRICT COURT 74SOUTH 100 EAST,TOOELE, UTAH allright, title and interestconveyed to and nowheld by it under saidDeed of Trust in theproperty situated in saidCounty and State de-scribed as: UNIT NO.13 CONTAINED WITHINCOMISKEY PARK GAR-DEN HOME CONDO-MINIUM PHASE 2, AUTAH CONDOMINIUMPROJECT, AS THESAME IS IDENTIFIEDIN THE RECORD OFPLAT MAP RECORDEDIN TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS ENTRY NO.240567 (AS SAID RE-CORD OF PLAT MAPMAY HAVE HERETO-FORE BEEN AMENDEDOR SUPPLEMENTED)AND IN THE DECLARA-TION OF CONDOMIN-IUM FOR COMISKEYPARK GARDEN HOMECONDOMINIUM PHASE2, A UTAH CONDOMIN-IUM PROJECT, RE-CORDED IN TOOELECOUNTY, UTAH AS EN-TRY NO. 240568, (ASSAID DECLARATIONMAY HAVE HERETO-FORE BEEN AMENDEDOR SUPPLEMENTED),TOGETHER WITH ANUNDIVIDED PERCENT-AGE OF OWNERSHIPINTEREST IN THECOMMON AREAS AP-PURTENANTTHERETO. The streetaddress and other com-mon designation of thereal property describedabove is purported to be:1722 North Boggs StreetTooele, Utah 84074 Theundersigned Trustee dis-claims any liability forany incorrectness of thestreet address and othercommon designation, ifany, shown herein. Saidsale will be made withoutcovenant or warranty,express or implied, re-garding title, possession,condition, or encum-brances, including fees,charges, and expensesof the Trustee and of thetrusts created by saidDeed of Trust, to pay theremaining principle sumsof the note(s) secured bysaid Deed of Trust.The current beneficiaryof the Trust Deed as ofthe date of this notice isU.S. BANK NATIONALASSOCIATION, ASTRUSTEE FOR TBWMORTGAGE-BACKEDTRUST SERIES 2006-5,MORTGAGEPASS-THROUGH CER-TIFICATES, SERIES2006-5 The recordowner of the property asof the recording of theNotice of Default is DE-B R A D O N O H O EDATED: May 3, 2013James H. Woodall10808 River FrontParkway, Suite 175South Jordan, Utah84095 (801) 254-9450Hours: 9:00 a.m. - 5:00p.m. Authorized Signa-ture James H. Woodall,Trustee R-430308(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 9, 16& 23, 2013)

THURSDAY May 23, 2013 C7

Tooele TranscripT-BulleTin

158 S. Sheridan St., Stockton $ 18,900 Great lot for building or investment. Turn left at store in Stockton, go 2 blocks and turn right on Sheridan, go over the hill and the lot is on the right!

Sherri Nelson 435-840-5167 #1136083

432 Meadows Dr., Tooele $ 44,900 Prime building location views of Tooele Valley and the entire Great Salt Lake - Priced to sell! - Peaceful, spacious and no backyard neighbors - Come and enjoy!

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1152807

406 Meadows Dr., Tooele $ 50,900 Spacious mountain side lot with tremendous views of entire Tooele Valley!

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1152813

649 S. Sally Way, Tooele $ 65,000 Very beautiful building lot. Views from front of property and to the East. Lot in area of nice homes.

Linda Theetge 801-554-9118 #1150810

324 Bronco Way, Stockton $ 69,000 Great building lot for a great price!

Sherri Nelson 435-840-5167 #1142714

8998 E. 950 N., Huntsville $ 69,900 Exceptional views overlooking entire valley for such a great price! Highly desirable location with tremendous building opportunities, all utilities are stubbed to the lot, meters not hooked up. Green Hills subdivision has over 1000 acres of common area with trails and stocked ponds. What more could you ask for??

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1135292

E. Hickman Canyon Road and Silver Ave. turnoff, Stockton $ 85,000

Superior farming/ranching lot - groomed and fenced. Must see to appreciate the serenity! Take a drive - this is good! 10 miles south on Old Mormon Trail from Grantsville or take Silver Ave out of Stockton til you get to Mormon Trail - E. Hickman Canyon Road is just s of Silve ave turnoff. Approximately 3 miles w on E. Hickman - awesome location!

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1104808

729 Oakridge Dr., Tooele $ 90,000 Exquisite building location - or tremendous extension of MLS 1087876’s phenomenal home -- this lot must be sold in conjunction with MLS 1087876.

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1145750

Junction of Hwy 89 & Scenic Hwy 12, Panguith $ 94,500

Power Nearby, Propane & Septic Needed - Water Shares Available - Billboard Property (Income Possible) Seller Financing to Qualifi ed Buyer - Down Payment Negotiable - Includes Parcels 9-9-14-0053 and 14-0053-0287 - Taxes are $41.41 per Parcel Jeannine Johnson 435-830-6369 #1160614

431 W. Wrathall Ln., Grantsville $ 95,000 Beautiful lot in the J. Reuben Clark estates - Ready to build on!

Jennifer Jones 435-830-2088 #1152082

417 W. Wrathall Ln., Grantsville $ 95,000 Beautiful lot in the J. Reuben Clark estates - Ready to build on!

Jennifer Jones 435-830-2088 #1152083

24 Memory Ln., Tooele $ 95,000 This is a great lot! Spacious and serene.

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1161048

South East Corner of Main and Cooley St., Grantsville $ 100,000

Must see to appreciate! Take a drive - this is good! On the South East corner of Main Street and Cooley Street in Grantsville. Awesome location!

Kyle Matthews 435-830-4652 #1137894

603 W. Three O’Clock Dr., Tooele $ 120,000

Zoned neighborhood commercial - potential for single family housing (7000 sq ft lots) or commercial development. Wonderful south Tooele location fronting Hwy 36 and south side of Three O’Clock Drive. Bring your ideas - it is a great time to create!

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1129760

Hickman Canyon 10 miles south of Grantsville, Stockton $ 125,000

Property is in greenbelt currently - will have higher taxes when purchased. MUST BE SOLD WITH MLS 1104808 (Lot #3 adjoining). Stunning serenity out on this lot - fully fenced with well and rights. Need generator to pump water. Current owner dry farmed 50 ton alfalfa last summer. 10 Miles south of Grantsville off of Old Mormon Trail, west on E. Hickman Canyon Road, approximately 3 miles in.

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1104797

602 W. Three O’Clock Dr., Tooele $ 145,000

Prime building location to serve south Tooele! Fronts Hwy 36 - zoned neighborhood commercial, many residential or commercial opportunities! Includes tax id 02-10-0-0045, which is corner of Coleman & Hwy 36 (.31 acre)

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1129759

400 Worthington St., Grantsville $ 225,000

Large subdividable acreage in Grantsville city that can be .5 acre lots - Great opportunity awaits! Horse property and irrigation shares available.

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1129758

For additional properties, please check our website at www.utahhomes.com

Lots & Acreage

BROKER Jennifer Jones

435-830-2088

Carol Autry801-520-6680

Miranda Brodston435-830-3319

Jim Busico435-840-1494

Jim Contos801-644-5801

Se Katvlno Elleka

Rachel Cowan435-830-7637

Patty Deakin801-651-1100

Julia Dominguez385-226-2429

Se Habla Español

John Gollaher435-830-7717

Jeannine Johnson435-830-6369

Mark Martinez435-830-0655

Kyle Mathews435-830-4652

Eu falo Português

Brett McConnell801-400-3210

Debbie Millward435-830-4716

Sherri Nelson435-840-1567

Vicki Powell435-830-6010

Laney Riegel, GRI, ABR435-830-7583

Linda Theetge801-544-9118

Christina Vowles435-496-3820

Jack Walters435-840-3010

Bart Powell435-830-6518

Rachael Cowan435-830-7637 #1115379

For More information and additional photos, please check out www.utahhomes.com

Saturday, May 25th, from

10:30am - 1pm

Open House

435-830-7637 #1115379

www.utahhomes.com

FULLY FINISHED HOME & YARD!

2335 W. Rim Rock Dr., Stockton $ 269,900 5 bdrms, 3 bths, 2 car grg., Horse Property w/ 3 seperate pens. Fully fi nished home and yard.

856 Valley View Dr., Tooele $ 175,000 5 bdrms, 3 bths, 2 car grg., Beautiful Rambler inside and out. Bright open kitchen - 2 family rooms - Central air and plenty of storage - Master bedroom with walk-in closet and master bathroom - Large fenced backyard with storage shed - Fruit trees, vegetable garden, raspberry and grape vines are left for you to enjoy - One year home warranty included - Fantastic view of the mountains - A must see!

Carol Autry 801-520-6680 #1161510

NEW LISTING

961 North 1340 East, Tooele $ 157,800 3 bdrm, 1 bth, 2 car grg., Cute home on corner lot. Well taken care of and in a great neighborhood. Wood fl oors and vaulted ceilings. Large kitchen with plenty of light. Balcony off the master bedroom. Walk-in closet and lots of storage. Play-Gym stays. Fully fenced in the back yard.

Carol Autry 801-520-6680 #1159803

NEW LISTING

1635 N. 150 E., Tooele $ 34,000 2 bdrm, 2 bths, 2 carport, Fully furnished, even includes pool table in this nice mobile home!

Linda Theetge 801-554-9118 #1149162

1709 N. 210 E., Tooele $ 58,000 3 bdrm, 2 bths, “Just like new” mobile home. This loan is assumable. Washer, dryer, refridgerator, gas grill all stay with home. Fenced area in back. Shed stays. Please call, email, or text with questions. Lot rent is $355 a month.

Sherri Nelson 435-840-5167 #1136847

546 E. 500 N., Tooele $ 85,000 4 bdrms, 3 bths, 2 car grg., Nice split level home in a great part of Tooele. Large rooms with a walkout basement. 2 Fireplaces. Finished basement. Buyer Backed Out at Last Minute, Need An Offer ASAP!

Carol Autry 801-520-6680 #1056519

234 S. 5th St., Tooele $ 114,500 3 bdrm, 1 full bth, New windows, updated bath, paint, dishwasher, shed and more - enclosed patio and all appliances stay! Comfortable and adorable - come see for yourself!

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1146209

846 S. 860 W., Tooele $ 134,999 3 bdrm, 2 bths, 1 car grg., Cozy Rambler with large Kitchen and a basement that can be used as a bedroom. Fully Fenced Backyard.

Jack Walters 435-840-3010 #1132789

551 Eastridge Dr., Tooele $ 147,500 4 bdrm, 1 full, 2 partial bths, New carpet, laminate, tile & newer furnace & central air - 100% freshly fi nished basement with recessed lighting and tiled walkways. Laundry room is very desirable too! Great concrete spaces to park all the toys, RV too! Fenced pet area - come see!

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1158703

PRICE REDUCED

864 E. 750 N., Tooele $ 149,900 5 bdrms, 2 bths, 2 car grg., New carpet and paint, Grand Master Bath, Vaulted ceiling, Landscaped, Fenced. Must See! Christina Vowles 435-496-3820 #1138101

615 S. Oak Court, Tooele $ 165,000 3 bdrm, 3 bths, 2 car grg., Very nice neighborhood condo with basement, community pool & clubhouse.

Vicki Powell 435-830-6010 #1142306

815 E. 540 N., Tooele $ 169,900 4 bdrm, 3 bths, 2 car grg., Nicely cared for home. Awesome kitchen island with granite countertop with lots of storage.

Linda Theetge 801-554-9118 #1147625

799 Buzianis Way, Tooele $ 250,000 4 bdrm, 4 bths, 4 car grg., Lovely East bench property. Great for entertaining inside & out!

Sherri Nelson 435-840-5167 #1149629

2210 Churchwood Dr., Tooele $ 309,000 6 bdrms, 4 bths, 3 car grg., 100% fi nished brick home with 2.5 acres! Fully fenced and landscaped with auto sprinklers. Great home, Great price!

Sherri Nelson 435-840-5167 #1142967

653 E. Main #12, Grantsville $ 32,999 3 bdrm, 2 bth, 1 car grg., Nice Unit on Corner Lot - Must See Inside - Garden Tub in Master Bath - No Large Dogs Allowed - Buyers Must Apply With Park Landlord to Purchase - Lot Fee $310.00

Jack Walters 435-840-3010 #1115177

366 Saddle Rd., Grantsville $ 315,000 5 Bdrms, 3 Bths, 4 Car grg., Wonderful Home, 100% fi nished, on .53 acres with over 3,800 sq. feet!

Sherri Nelson 435-840-5167 #1150426

814 Saddle Rd., Grantsville $ 329,900 5 bdrms, 2.75 bths, 3 car grg., On .7 acre manicured horse property! You won’t want to miss out on this home! Over 3700 fi nished sq. ft. of phenomenal living space - wet bar, hot tub, weight room, den, formal dining, fi replace, breakfast bar, built ins everywhere, fruit trees & RV parking and more - and you must see the garage! Refreshments will be served! Come take a tour

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1155200

6021 Bayshore Dr., Stansbury $ 338,900 4 bdrms, 3 bths, 2 car grg., This home features an open custom kitchen with gas stove-top island, Knotty Alder cabinets which coordinate with fi replace mantle and railing. A full length bridge/balcony overlooks the family room as a feature of the open design.GE mid-range appliance overlooks the family room as a feature of the open design. Large cedar covered deck and tall 19 foot high ceilings offer incredible mountain and valley views.

Sherri Nelson 435-840-5167 #1152226

4590 Droubay Road, Erda $ 265,000 6 Bdrms, 1.75 Bths, Attached 2 Car grg.,Detached 4 Car grg., Oversized Attached 2 Car Garage AND Detached 4 Car or more garage/workshop all on 1 acre HORSE PROPERTY. Great location and many updated amenities that you will want to call your own - Sunroom, enormous 2nd story family room and mature spacious yard.

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1114374

1475 E. Country Lane, Erda $ 365,000 6 bdrm, 2.5 bths, 2 car grg., With barn situated on 5 acres of prime horse property. 5 acre feet of h20. Over 3600 fi nished sq. ft. Great views. Optimum positioning to get the best of yard and possibilities for animals or pasture. Come see for yourself!

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1100107

1078 N. Church Rd., Rush Valley $ 185,000 3 bdrm, 2 bths, 2 car grg., Horse property with another home included in sale! So well cared for!

Sherri Nelson 435-840-5167 #1131054

Featured Home

3 bdrm, 3 bth, 2 car grg.,

1966 N. 70 W., Tooele

$ 134,900

Laney Riegel 435-830-7583 #1132936

Bright, well maintained end unit with 9’ tray ceilings, new tile - and remodeled bathroom - very effi cient way to live without sacrifi cing sq footage! Great fl oor plan and close to major amenities such as shopping, highway, and schools.

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALE APN: 15-047-0-0013Trust No. 11-00631-8Ref: DEBRA DONO-HOE IMPORTANT NO-TICE TO PROPERTYOWNER YOU ARE INDEFAULT UNDER ADEED OF TRUST datedSeptember 7, 2006. UN-LESS YOU TAKE AC-TION TO PROTECTYOUR PROPERTY, ITMAY BE SOLD AT APUBLIC SALE. IF YOUNEED AN EXPLANA-TION OF THIS PRO-C E E D I N G , Y O USHOULD CONTACT ALAWYER. On June 11,2013 at 4:30 p.m.,James H. Woodall, asduly appointed Trusteeunder a Deed of Trustrecorded on September21, 2006, as Entry No.268014, of the official re-cords in the office at theCounty Recorder ofTOOELE County, Stateof Utah executed by DE-BRA DONOHOE WILLSELL AT PUBLIC AUC-TION TO HIGHEST BID-DER, PAYABLE INLAWFUL MONEY OFTHE UNITED STATESAT THE TIME OF SALE.SUCCESSFUL BID-DERS MUST TENDERA DEPOSIT OF $20,000IN CERTIFIED FUNDSTO THE TRUSTEE ATTHE TIME OF SALE,WITH THE BALANCEDUE BY NOON THEFOLLOWING BUSI-NESS DAY, AT THEOFFICE OF THE TRUS-TEE. AT THE MAIN EN-TRANCE TO THETOOELE COUNTY DIS-TRICT COURT 74SOUTH 100 EAST,TOOELE, UTAH allright, title and interestconveyed to and nowheld by it under saidDeed of Trust in theproperty situated in saidCounty and State de-scribed as: UNIT NO.13 CONTAINED WITHINCOMISKEY PARK GAR-DEN HOME CONDO-MINIUM PHASE 2, AUTAH CONDOMINIUMPROJECT, AS THESAME IS IDENTIFIEDIN THE RECORD OFPLAT MAP RECORDEDIN TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS ENTRY NO.240567 (AS SAID RE-CORD OF PLAT MAPMAY HAVE HERETO-FORE BEEN AMENDEDOR SUPPLEMENTED)AND IN THE DECLARA-TION OF CONDOMIN-IUM FOR COMISKEYPARK GARDEN HOMECONDOMINIUM PHASE2, A UTAH CONDOMIN-IUM PROJECT, RE-CORDED IN TOOELECOUNTY, UTAH AS EN-TRY NO. 240568, (ASSAID DECLARATIONMAY HAVE HERETO-FORE BEEN AMENDEDOR SUPPLEMENTED),TOGETHER WITH ANUNDIVIDED PERCENT-AGE OF OWNERSHIPINTEREST IN THECOMMON AREAS AP-PURTENANTTHERETO. The streetaddress and other com-mon designation of thereal property describedabove is purported to be:1722 North Boggs StreetTooele, Utah 84074 Theundersigned Trustee dis-claims any liability forany incorrectness of thestreet address and othercommon designation, ifany, shown herein. Saidsale will be made withoutcovenant or warranty,express or implied, re-garding title, possession,condition, or encum-brances, including fees,charges, and expensesof the Trustee and of thetrusts created by saidDeed of Trust, to pay theremaining principle sumsof the note(s) secured bysaid Deed of Trust.The current beneficiaryof the Trust Deed as ofthe date of this notice isU.S. BANK NATIONALASSOCIATION, ASTRUSTEE FOR TBWMORTGAGE-BACKEDTRUST SERIES 2006-5,MORTGAGEPASS-THROUGH CER-TIFICATES, SERIES2006-5 The recordowner of the property asof the recording of theNotice of Default is DE-B R A D O N O H O EDATED: May 3, 2013James H. Woodall10808 River FrontParkway, Suite 175South Jordan, Utah84095 (801) 254-9450Hours: 9:00 a.m. - 5:00p.m. Authorized Signa-ture James H. Woodall,Trustee R-430308(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 9, 16& 23, 2013)

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALE APN: 15-047-0-0013Trust No. 11-00631-8Ref: DEBRA DONO-HOE IMPORTANT NO-TICE TO PROPERTYOWNER YOU ARE INDEFAULT UNDER ADEED OF TRUST datedSeptember 7, 2006. UN-LESS YOU TAKE AC-TION TO PROTECTYOUR PROPERTY, ITMAY BE SOLD AT APUBLIC SALE. IF YOUNEED AN EXPLANA-TION OF THIS PRO-C E E D I N G , Y O USHOULD CONTACT ALAWYER. On June 11,2013 at 4:30 p.m.,James H. Woodall, asduly appointed Trusteeunder a Deed of Trustrecorded on September21, 2006, as Entry No.268014, of the official re-cords in the office at theCounty Recorder ofTOOELE County, Stateof Utah executed by DE-BRA DONOHOE WILLSELL AT PUBLIC AUC-TION TO HIGHEST BID-DER, PAYABLE INLAWFUL MONEY OFTHE UNITED STATESAT THE TIME OF SALE.SUCCESSFUL BID-DERS MUST TENDERA DEPOSIT OF $20,000IN CERTIFIED FUNDSTO THE TRUSTEE ATTHE TIME OF SALE,WITH THE BALANCEDUE BY NOON THEFOLLOWING BUSI-NESS DAY, AT THEOFFICE OF THE TRUS-TEE. AT THE MAIN EN-TRANCE TO THETOOELE COUNTY DIS-TRICT COURT 74SOUTH 100 EAST,TOOELE, UTAH allright, title and interestconveyed to and nowheld by it under saidDeed of Trust in theproperty situated in saidCounty and State de-scribed as: UNIT NO.13 CONTAINED WITHINCOMISKEY PARK GAR-DEN HOME CONDO-MINIUM PHASE 2, AUTAH CONDOMINIUMPROJECT, AS THESAME IS IDENTIFIEDIN THE RECORD OFPLAT MAP RECORDEDIN TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS ENTRY NO.240567 (AS SAID RE-CORD OF PLAT MAPMAY HAVE HERETO-FORE BEEN AMENDEDOR SUPPLEMENTED)AND IN THE DECLARA-TION OF CONDOMIN-IUM FOR COMISKEYPARK GARDEN HOMECONDOMINIUM PHASE2, A UTAH CONDOMIN-IUM PROJECT, RE-CORDED IN TOOELECOUNTY, UTAH AS EN-TRY NO. 240568, (ASSAID DECLARATIONMAY HAVE HERETO-FORE BEEN AMENDEDOR SUPPLEMENTED),TOGETHER WITH ANUNDIVIDED PERCENT-AGE OF OWNERSHIPINTEREST IN THECOMMON AREAS AP-PURTENANTTHERETO. The streetaddress and other com-mon designation of thereal property describedabove is purported to be:1722 North Boggs StreetTooele, Utah 84074 Theundersigned Trustee dis-claims any liability forany incorrectness of thestreet address and othercommon designation, ifany, shown herein. Saidsale will be made withoutcovenant or warranty,express or implied, re-garding title, possession,condition, or encum-brances, including fees,charges, and expensesof the Trustee and of thetrusts created by saidDeed of Trust, to pay theremaining principle sumsof the note(s) secured bysaid Deed of Trust.The current beneficiaryof the Trust Deed as ofthe date of this notice isU.S. BANK NATIONALASSOCIATION, ASTRUSTEE FOR TBWMORTGAGE-BACKEDTRUST SERIES 2006-5,MORTGAGEPASS-THROUGH CER-TIFICATES, SERIES2006-5 The recordowner of the property asof the recording of theNotice of Default is DE-B R A D O N O H O EDATED: May 3, 2013James H. Woodall10808 River FrontParkway, Suite 175South Jordan, Utah84095 (801) 254-9450Hours: 9:00 a.m. - 5:00p.m. Authorized Signa-ture James H. Woodall,Trustee R-430308(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 9, 16& 23, 2013)

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALE APN: 15-047-0-0013Trust No. 11-00631-8Ref: DEBRA DONO-HOE IMPORTANT NO-TICE TO PROPERTYOWNER YOU ARE INDEFAULT UNDER ADEED OF TRUST datedSeptember 7, 2006. UN-LESS YOU TAKE AC-TION TO PROTECTYOUR PROPERTY, ITMAY BE SOLD AT APUBLIC SALE. IF YOUNEED AN EXPLANA-TION OF THIS PRO-C E E D I N G , Y O USHOULD CONTACT ALAWYER. On June 11,2013 at 4:30 p.m.,James H. Woodall, asduly appointed Trusteeunder a Deed of Trustrecorded on September21, 2006, as Entry No.268014, of the official re-cords in the office at theCounty Recorder ofTOOELE County, Stateof Utah executed by DE-BRA DONOHOE WILLSELL AT PUBLIC AUC-TION TO HIGHEST BID-DER, PAYABLE INLAWFUL MONEY OFTHE UNITED STATESAT THE TIME OF SALE.SUCCESSFUL BID-DERS MUST TENDERA DEPOSIT OF $20,000IN CERTIFIED FUNDSTO THE TRUSTEE ATTHE TIME OF SALE,WITH THE BALANCEDUE BY NOON THEFOLLOWING BUSI-NESS DAY, AT THEOFFICE OF THE TRUS-TEE. AT THE MAIN EN-TRANCE TO THETOOELE COUNTY DIS-TRICT COURT 74SOUTH 100 EAST,TOOELE, UTAH allright, title and interestconveyed to and nowheld by it under saidDeed of Trust in theproperty situated in saidCounty and State de-scribed as: UNIT NO.13 CONTAINED WITHINCOMISKEY PARK GAR-DEN HOME CONDO-MINIUM PHASE 2, AUTAH CONDOMINIUMPROJECT, AS THESAME IS IDENTIFIEDIN THE RECORD OFPLAT MAP RECORDEDIN TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS ENTRY NO.240567 (AS SAID RE-CORD OF PLAT MAPMAY HAVE HERETO-FORE BEEN AMENDEDOR SUPPLEMENTED)AND IN THE DECLARA-TION OF CONDOMIN-IUM FOR COMISKEYPARK GARDEN HOMECONDOMINIUM PHASE2, A UTAH CONDOMIN-IUM PROJECT, RE-CORDED IN TOOELECOUNTY, UTAH AS EN-TRY NO. 240568, (ASSAID DECLARATIONMAY HAVE HERETO-FORE BEEN AMENDEDOR SUPPLEMENTED),TOGETHER WITH ANUNDIVIDED PERCENT-AGE OF OWNERSHIPINTEREST IN THECOMMON AREAS AP-PURTENANTTHERETO. The streetaddress and other com-mon designation of thereal property describedabove is purported to be:1722 North Boggs StreetTooele, Utah 84074 Theundersigned Trustee dis-claims any liability forany incorrectness of thestreet address and othercommon designation, ifany, shown herein. Saidsale will be made withoutcovenant or warranty,express or implied, re-garding title, possession,condition, or encum-brances, including fees,charges, and expensesof the Trustee and of thetrusts created by saidDeed of Trust, to pay theremaining principle sumsof the note(s) secured bysaid Deed of Trust.The current beneficiaryof the Trust Deed as ofthe date of this notice isU.S. BANK NATIONALASSOCIATION, ASTRUSTEE FOR TBWMORTGAGE-BACKEDTRUST SERIES 2006-5,MORTGAGEPASS-THROUGH CER-TIFICATES, SERIES2006-5 The recordowner of the property asof the recording of theNotice of Default is DE-B R A D O N O H O EDATED: May 3, 2013James H. Woodall10808 River FrontParkway, Suite 175South Jordan, Utah84095 (801) 254-9450Hours: 9:00 a.m. - 5:00p.m. Authorized Signa-ture James H. Woodall,Trustee R-430308(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 9, 16& 23, 2013)

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

NOTICE TO WATERUSERSThe applications belowwere filed with the Divi-sion of Water Rights inTooele County.These are informal pro-ceedings per RuleR655-6-2.Protests concerning anapplication must belegibly written or typed,contain the name andmailing address of theprotest ing party,STATE THE APPLICA-TION NUMBER PRO-TESTED, CITE REA-SONS FOR THE PRO-TEST, and REQUEST AHEARING, if desired.Also, A $15 FEE MUSTBE INCLUDED FOREACH APPLICATIONPROTESTED. Protestsmust be filed with the Di-vision of Water Rights,PO Box 146300, SaltL a k e C i t y , U T84114-6300, or by handdelivery to a Divisionoffice during normalbusiness hours ON ORBEFORE JUNE 19,2013.Please visit http://waterrights.utah.gov orcall (801)-538-7240 foradditional information.CHANGE APPLICA-TION(S)15-722(a38940): WestErda Improvement Dis-trict propose(s) using40.1 ac-ft. from ground-water (Golden GardensSbdvsn, Erda) for IRRI-GATION; DOMESTIC.15-4486(a38989): Ste-ven D and Jennifer HMiller propose(s) using2.0 ac-ft. from ground-water (Lot 23, BrookfieldEst, Erda) for IRRIGA-TION; DOMESTIC.EXTENSION(S)15-2273(a14267): OphirCreek Water Co. is/arefiling an extension for11.0 cfs or 2065.98 ac-ft.from Ophir Creek (Eastof Ophir) for IRRIGA-TION; STOCKWATER-ING; DOMESTIC for IR-RIGATION; STOCKWA-TERING; DOMESTIC;FISH CULTURE: Waterwill also be used for fishculture; FISH CULTURE:Water will also be usedfor fish culture.Kent L. Jones, P.E.STATE ENGINEER(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 23 &30, 2013)

Public Notices Water User

NOTICE TO WATERUSERSThe applications belowwere filed with the Divi-sion of Water Rights inTooele County.These are informal pro-ceedings per RuleR655-6-2.Protests concerning anapplication must belegibly written or typed,contain the name andmailing address of theprotest ing party,STATE THE APPLICA-TION NUMBER PRO-TESTED, CITE REA-SONS FOR THE PRO-TEST, and REQUEST AHEARING, if desired.Also, A $15 FEE MUSTBE INCLUDED FOREACH APPLICATIONPROTESTED. Protestsmust be filed with the Di-vision of Water Rights,PO Box 146300, SaltL a k e C i t y , U T84114-6300, or by handdelivery to a Divisionoffice during normalbusiness hours ON ORBEFORE JUNE 19,2013.Please visit http://waterrights.utah.gov orcall (801)-538-7240 foradditional information.CHANGE APPLICA-TION(S)15-722(a38940): WestErda Improvement Dis-trict propose(s) using40.1 ac-ft. from ground-water (Golden GardensSbdvsn, Erda) for IRRI-GATION; DOMESTIC.15-4486(a38989): Ste-ven D and Jennifer HMiller propose(s) using2.0 ac-ft. from ground-water (Lot 23, BrookfieldEst, Erda) for IRRIGA-TION; DOMESTIC.EXTENSION(S)15-2273(a14267): OphirCreek Water Co. is/arefiling an extension for11.0 cfs or 2065.98 ac-ft.from Ophir Creek (Eastof Ophir) for IRRIGA-TION; STOCKWATER-ING; DOMESTIC for IR-RIGATION; STOCKWA-TERING; DOMESTIC;FISH CULTURE: Waterwill also be used for fishculture; FISH CULTURE:Water will also be usedfor fish culture.Kent L. Jones, P.E.STATE ENGINEER(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 23 &30, 2013)

Public Notices Water User

NOTICE TO WATERUSERSThe applications belowwere filed with the Divi-sion of Water Rights inTooele County.These are informal pro-ceedings per RuleR655-6-2.Protests concerning anapplication must belegibly written or typed,contain the name andmailing address of theprotest ing party,STATE THE APPLICA-TION NUMBER PRO-TESTED, CITE REA-SONS FOR THE PRO-TEST, and REQUEST AHEARING, if desired.Also, A $15 FEE MUSTBE INCLUDED FOREACH APPLICATIONPROTESTED. Protestsmust be filed with the Di-vision of Water Rights,PO Box 146300, SaltL a k e C i t y , U T84114-6300, or by handdelivery to a Divisionoffice during normalbusiness hours ON ORBEFORE JUNE 19,2013.Please visit http://waterrights.utah.gov orcall (801)-538-7240 foradditional information.CHANGE APPLICA-TION(S)15-722(a38940): WestErda Improvement Dis-trict propose(s) using40.1 ac-ft. from ground-water (Golden GardensSbdvsn, Erda) for IRRI-GATION; DOMESTIC.15-4486(a38989): Ste-ven D and Jennifer HMiller propose(s) using2.0 ac-ft. from ground-water (Lot 23, BrookfieldEst, Erda) for IRRIGA-TION; DOMESTIC.EXTENSION(S)15-2273(a14267): OphirCreek Water Co. is/arefiling an extension for11.0 cfs or 2065.98 ac-ft.from Ophir Creek (Eastof Ophir) for IRRIGA-TION; STOCKWATER-ING; DOMESTIC for IR-RIGATION; STOCKWA-TERING; DOMESTIC;FISH CULTURE: Waterwill also be used for fishculture; FISH CULTURE:Water will also be usedfor fish culture.Kent L. Jones, P.E.STATE ENGINEER(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 23 &30, 2013)

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

INVITATION TO BIDOWNER: The Board ofEducat ion TooeleCounty School DistrictPROJECT: Fire AlarmUpgrade Vernon Ele-mentary SchoolVernon, Utah 84080BIDS OPENING: 2:00PM. June 6, 2013Tooele County SchoolDistrict 92 South Lode-stone WayTooele, Utah 84074MANDOTORY PRE-BIDWALK-THROUGH1:00 PM May 30, 2013Vernon ElementarySchool 70 North MainVernon, Utah 84080Project documents willbe available May 21,2013 at the TooeleCounty School District,District Offices and atNaylor Wentworth LundArchitects Offices, 336South 400 West, SaltLake City. Sealed bidswill be received by theBoard of Education forthe Fire Alarm Upgradeat the address and timestated above. Bids re-ceived after the bid re-ceipt time stated will notbe accepted. The ownerreserves the right to re-ject any and all bids, orto waive any irregulari-ties or informalities inany bid or in the bidding.All bids are subject to fi-nal approval of theBoard of Education at itsregular schedule boardmeeting. All questionsconcerning the bid shallbe directed to JeffDodge Project ArchitectNaylor Wentworth LundA r c h i t e c t s 8 0 1 -355-5959 or Steven L.West Construction Coor-dinator for TooeleCounty School District at435-833-1900.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 21,23, 28 & 30, 2013)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

INVITATION TO BIDOWNER: The Board ofEducat ion TooeleCounty School DistrictPROJECT: Fire AlarmUpgrade Vernon Ele-mentary SchoolVernon, Utah 84080BIDS OPENING: 2:00PM. June 6, 2013Tooele County SchoolDistrict 92 South Lode-stone WayTooele, Utah 84074MANDOTORY PRE-BIDWALK-THROUGH1:00 PM May 30, 2013Vernon ElementarySchool 70 North MainVernon, Utah 84080Project documents willbe available May 21,2013 at the TooeleCounty School District,District Offices and atNaylor Wentworth LundArchitects Offices, 336South 400 West, SaltLake City. Sealed bidswill be received by theBoard of Education forthe Fire Alarm Upgradeat the address and timestated above. Bids re-ceived after the bid re-ceipt time stated will notbe accepted. The ownerreserves the right to re-ject any and all bids, orto waive any irregulari-ties or informalities inany bid or in the bidding.All bids are subject to fi-nal approval of theBoard of Education at itsregular schedule boardmeeting. All questionsconcerning the bid shallbe directed to JeffDodge Project ArchitectNaylor Wentworth LundA r c h i t e c t s 8 0 1 -355-5959 or Steven L.West Construction Coor-dinator for TooeleCounty School District at435-833-1900.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 21,23, 28 & 30, 2013)

INVITATION TO BIDOWNER: The Board ofEduca t i on Tooe leCounty School DistrictPROJECT Land for saleSouth Droubay LaneTooele, Utah 84074BIDS OPENING:2:00 PM. May 28, 2013Tooele County SchoolDistrict 92 South Lode-stone Way Tooele, UT84074Sealed bids will be re-ceived by the Board ofEducation for the TooeleCounty School District atthe address and timestated above. For thesale of four acres of rawland located at southDroubay lane in Tooele,Utah 84074. TCSD willhave a minimum bid of$32,000 per acre.Beginning 1320 feetNorth of the Southwestcorner of Section 26,Township 3 South,Range 4 West; Salt LakeBase and Meridian; run-ning thence North 400feet; thence East 435.6feet thence South 400feet; thence West 435.6feet to point of begin-ning, subject to all re-strictions, easementsand rights-of-way of re-cord or enforceable un-der law or equity.The Owner reserves theright to reject any and allbids, or to waive any ir-regularities or informali-ties in any bid. Finalsale will be subject toapproval of the Board ofEducation in the June4th Board meeting. Allquestions concerning thebid shall be directed toSteven L. West, Con-struction Coordinator orLark N. Reynolds, Busi-ness Administrator forTooele County SchoolDistrict at 435-833-1900(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 14,16, 21 & 23, 2013)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

INVITATION TO BIDOWNER: The Board ofEduca t i on Tooe leCounty School DistrictPROJECT Land for saleSouth Droubay LaneTooele, Utah 84074BIDS OPENING:2:00 PM. May 28, 2013Tooele County SchoolDistrict 92 South Lode-stone Way Tooele, UT84074Sealed bids will be re-ceived by the Board ofEducation for the TooeleCounty School District atthe address and timestated above. For thesale of four acres of rawland located at southDroubay lane in Tooele,Utah 84074. TCSD willhave a minimum bid of$32,000 per acre.Beginning 1320 feetNorth of the Southwestcorner of Section 26,Township 3 South,Range 4 West; Salt LakeBase and Meridian; run-ning thence North 400feet; thence East 435.6feet thence South 400feet; thence West 435.6feet to point of begin-ning, subject to all re-strictions, easementsand rights-of-way of re-cord or enforceable un-der law or equity.The Owner reserves theright to reject any and allbids, or to waive any ir-regularities or informali-ties in any bid. Finalsale will be subject toapproval of the Board ofEducation in the June4th Board meeting. Allquestions concerning thebid shall be directed toSteven L. West, Con-struction Coordinator orLark N. Reynolds, Busi-ness Administrator forTooele County SchoolDistrict at 435-833-1900(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 14,16, 21 & 23, 2013)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

NOTICE TO CREDI-TORS AND AN-NOUNCEMENT OF AP-POINTMENTEstate of JACK L.CARLSON, Deceased.Probate No. 133300045LUCY C. DEATON,whose address is 2710Mulberry, Missoula,Montana 59804, hasbeen appointed PersonalRepresentative of theestate of the above-named decedent. Allpersons having claimsagainst the abovenamed estate are re-quired to present them tothe undersigned or to theClerk of the Court on orbefore the 16th day ofAugust, 2013, or saidclaims shall be foreverbarred.LUCY C. DEATON2710 MulberryMissoula, Montana59804Telephone:(406)543-7704(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 16,23 & 30, 2013)

STANSBURY PARK IM-PROVEMENT DIS-TRICTNOTICE OF ELECTIONAND FILING PERIODNOTICE is hereby giventhat the Stansbury ParkImprovement District(Culinary water, sanitarysewer and storm drainservices) will hold a mu-nicipal election to electtwo (2) Trustees, eachfor a four year term. Ifelected to office, the per-son must be willing andable to attend requiredmeeting each month andbe responsible to over-see any designated areaof responsibility. Givena sufficient number ofcandidates, an electionwill be held on Novem-ber 5, 2013.Qualifications for a can-didate are: (1) Be aUnited States citizen atthe time of filing; (2) Bea registered voter; (3)Be a resident of the Spe-cial District at least 365consecutive days pre-ceding election; (4) Be atleast 18 years old.Qualified candidatesmay file a Declaration ofCandidacy form. The fil-ing is to be done in per-son with the Improve-ment District Clerk, 30Plaza, Stansbury Park,Utah. The filing period isfrom June 3, 2013 toJune 7, 2013, duringregular office hours, 8:00a.m. through 4:30 p.m.,and not later than 5:00p.m. on the last day offiling.If you have any ques-tions, please contact theDist r ic t Of f ice at435-882-7922.Dated this 22nd day ofMay, 2013.Brett Palmer, DistrictManagerStansbury Park Im-provement District(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 23,28 & 30, 2013)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

STANSBURY PARK IM-PROVEMENT DIS-TRICTNOTICE OF ELECTIONAND FILING PERIODNOTICE is hereby giventhat the Stansbury ParkImprovement District(Culinary water, sanitarysewer and storm drainservices) will hold a mu-nicipal election to electtwo (2) Trustees, eachfor a four year term. Ifelected to office, the per-son must be willing andable to attend requiredmeeting each month andbe responsible to over-see any designated areaof responsibility. Givena sufficient number ofcandidates, an electionwill be held on Novem-ber 5, 2013.Qualifications for a can-didate are: (1) Be aUnited States citizen atthe time of filing; (2) Bea registered voter; (3)Be a resident of the Spe-cial District at least 365consecutive days pre-ceding election; (4) Be atleast 18 years old.Qualified candidatesmay file a Declaration ofCandidacy form. The fil-ing is to be done in per-son with the Improve-ment District Clerk, 30Plaza, Stansbury Park,Utah. The filing period isfrom June 3, 2013 toJune 7, 2013, duringregular office hours, 8:00a.m. through 4:30 p.m.,and not later than 5:00p.m. on the last day offiling.If you have any ques-tions, please contact theDist r ic t Of f ice at435-882-7922.Dated this 22nd day ofMay, 2013.Brett Palmer, DistrictManagerStansbury Park Im-provement District(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin May 23,28 & 30, 2013)

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

Tooele County’s Most Current Real

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TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

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THURSDAY May 23, 2013c8THURSDAY May 23, 2013 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN C5

How to avoid identity theft when you travelDear Savvy Senior,

What tips can you recommend to help retirees guard against identity theft when traveling? My sister and her husband had their identity stolen while on vacation last year, and I want to make sure I’m protecting myself on my trip to Europe next month.

Paranoid Pam

Dear Pam,

Most people don’t realize that when you travel, your risk of identity

theft increases. Here are a few simple steps you can take to protect yourself while you’re away.

Alert your credit card com-panies: Before you leave, let them know when, where and how long you’ll be traveling. This helps their fraud depart-ments stop bogus charges if your card is used where you’re not. And, it reduces the risk that your card will be frozen when you use it far from home.

Secure your mail: Get a friend or neighbor to pick up your mail every day while you’re gone, or stop your mail at the post office. A full mailbox can be very inviting to identity thieves and burglars. Also, stop the newspaper, and don’t broadcast your travel plans on social net-working websites.

Clean out your wallet: Pickpockets love tourist desti-nations, so take only essential identifiers, like your driver’s license, and just two credit cards – carry one with you, and lock the other one in a hotel room safe in case your wallet gets sto-len. Also, don’t ever carry your Social Security card in your wal-let, and leave your checkbook home too.

It’s also a good idea to make copies of your plane tickets, hotel reservations, passport, driver’s license and credit cards, and leave them with a friend or relative who you can call in an emergency. And make a list of contact numbers of your credit card providers so you can call them if your pocket gets picked.

Protect your smartphone: These are gold mines for ID thieves. If you use a smart-phone, protect your personal information by using the secu-rity settings to lock your screen with a password. Then install a GPS location tracking app on

your phone such as “Where’s My Droid” for Android devices, or if you’re an iPhone user, activate the built in “Find My iPhone” app. You can also set up your phone so that if it does get stolen, you can remotely erase its data. Your wireless car-rier may offer this service, and many security apps include this feature.

Use safe ATMs: If you need cash while you’re away, use ATMs that are located at banks. These are more secure than stand-alone ATMs which can be rigged to capture your card information that thieves can steal.

Safeguard your hotel: Never leave your wallet, passport, credit cards or other valuables lying around your hotel room. Either keep them with you or lock them up in the hotel safe. And if you have a laptop com-puter or tablet, get a locking device that lets you lock it to something fixed in the room. You local computer store can help you with this.

Be careful with hotel com-puters and free Wi-Fi networks: Don’t access your personal accounts or disclose any of your financial information on hotel or other public computers or on public Wi-Fi networks. You never know what identity-steal-ing software is at work.

Freeze your credit: A tempo-rary freeze denies access to your credit history, so ID thieves can’t open accounts in your name while you’re away, but it doesn’t stop you from using your credit card. To set up a freeze, contact each of the three credit bureaus – Equifax (equifax.com, 800-685-1111), Experian (experian.com, 888-397-3742) and TransUnion (transunion.com, 877-322-8228). It typically costs around $10 per credit bureau to freeze your account, and $10 to unfreeze it. If you’re going to be gone for an extended period of time this is a good extra protection.

Jim Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book.

by Jim Miller

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