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T RANSCRIPT B ULLETIN T OOELE TUESDAY August 13, 2019 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 126 No. 21 $1.00 Siblings give 50 yards of service Serving Tooele County Since 1894 BULLETIN BOARD B6 CLASSIFIEDS B4 HOMETOWN B1 OBITUARIES A6 OPEN FORUM A4 SPORTS A8 INSIDE Stansbury Days starts Friday See A2 Tooele High football preview See A8 Ryan Shupe takes the Fridays on Vine stage See A5 New machine helps with ballot count TIM GILLIE EDITOR It’s called the MBV1000 and it can process up to 100 return ballot envelopes per minute. It scans the voter ID barcode and captures the voter’s signature for analysis by advanced signa- ture recognition technology. This year’s municipal prima- ry election is the maiden voy- age for the MBV — mail ballot verifier — in Tooele County. The 2019 election is the first municipal election in the coun- ty to be conducted by mail. The 2018 general election, which included county offices, was conducted by mail. The MBV was part of the new equipment purchased by the county in 2018 when it made the switch to voting by mail, but the device was not ready to be used in the 2018 election. The switch to voting by mail was made for several reasons, according to Tooele County Clerk Marilyn Gillette. It started with the need to replace old electronic voting machines, she said. Almost half of the county was already voting by mail and most other counties in Utah were already voting by mail, according to Gillette. Tooele County decided to join with the other counties in purchasing new equipment for counting vote by mail ballots instead of spending money replacing the old voting machines, Gillette said. Mail-in precincts in Tooele County commission studies plans to divide county up for new government TIM GILLIE EDITOR The process of dividing up Tooele County for a new form of county government has started. Maps depicting five dif- ferent proposed plans to divide Tooele County into five districts for the election of county council members were displayed in the hallway of the county building during the Tooele County Commission’s Aug. 6 meeting. The division of the county into council districts is required by the change in county gov- ernment approved by voters in the November 2018 election. That new form of government will replace the current three- member commission with a part time, five-member county council and a hired manager. The county council districts need to be approved by the current County Commission in time for candidates to file and run for election to the council in the November 2020 elec- tion.That election could start as early as January 2020. State code gives the respon- sibility of determining the dis- trict boundaries to the county’s legislative body, which at this time is the County Commission, according to Tooele County Attorney Scott Broadhead Broadhead told the Tooele County Government Study Committee that the county clerk would draw up proposed boundaries to be approved by Tooele City Council approves $2.3M solid waste fund transfer STEVE HOWE STAFF WRITER The Tooele City Council approved a $2.3 million transfer from its solid waste fund to the capital projects fund during its meeting last Wednesday. The one-time transfer followed a mailed public notice and a public hear- ing, moving a portion of the solid waste fund’s balance to pay for capital proj- ects and equipment. The solid waste fund handles the City’s trash and recy- clable collection. Included in the transfer amount was $500,000 toward interior furnishing and equipment for the new police sta- tion. The city’s $9 million loan through the state’s Permanent Community Impact Fund Board to build the police station can’t be used toward internal furnishing and equipment. The transfer is also earmarked to cover the costs of four new snow- plows, expected to be approximately $960,000, and airpacks for the Tooele City Fire Department. The city’s snowplows are aging and in need of replacement, according to Tooele City Public Works Director Steve Evans. A structure to store fire department apparatus on 1000 North was also dis- cussed by the City Council during the 5 p.m. work session last Wednesday, but more discussion was requested by Tooele City Fire Chief Rick Harrison. Concerns about the structural integrity FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Tooele County Deputy Clerk Holly Shields prepares and verifies signatures on ballots returned by voters for the primary election. Andrew Furniss dives into the pool. LIfeguard Lauren Wardle (right) watches divers and swimmers in the pool. Swimmers enjoy the cool waters of the pool at the EnergySolutions Aquatic Center. Mia Norton holds her nose while her father Matt Norton keeps her head above water at the EnergySolutions Aquatic Center Tuesday. PHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE WET AND WILD AT DESERET PEAK Zander Labaka (right) swims at the pool. SEE WASTE PAGE A7 MBV 1000 to provide electronic voter signature verification for this year’s municipal primary SEE BALLOT PAGE A7 SEE DIVIDE PAGE A7

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Page 1: Vol. 126 No. 21 $1.00 New machine …tooeleonline.com/.../2019/08/8-13-19-Transcript-Bulletin.pdf · 2019-08-08 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY August 13, 2019 Vol. 126 No

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTTOOELE

TUESDAY August 13, 2019 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 126 No. 21 $1.00

Siblings give 50 yards of service

Serving Tooele County

Since 1894

BULLETIN BOARD B6

CLASSIFIEDS B4

HOMETOWN B1

OBITUARIES A6

OPEN FORUM A4

SPORTS A8

INSIDE Stansbury Days starts FridaySee A2

Tooele High football previewSee A8

Ryan Shupe takes the Fridays on Vine stageSee A5

New machine helps with ballot count

TIM GILLIEEDITOR

It’s called the MBV1000 and it can process up to 100 return ballot envelopes per minute. It scans the voter ID barcode and captures the voter’s signature for analysis by advanced signa-ture recognition technology.

This year’s municipal prima-ry election is the maiden voy-age for the MBV — mail ballot verifier — in Tooele County.

The 2019 election is the first municipal election in the coun-ty to be conducted by mail. The 2018 general election, which included county offices, was conducted by mail.

The MBV was part of the new equipment purchased by the county in 2018 when it made the switch to voting by mail, but the device was not

ready to be used in the 2018 election.

The switch to voting by mail was made for several reasons, according to Tooele County Clerk Marilyn Gillette.

It started with the need to replace old electronic voting machines, she said.

Almost half of the county was already voting by mail and most other counties in Utah were already voting by mail, according to Gillette.

Tooele County decided to join with the other counties in purchasing new equipment for counting vote by mail ballots instead of spending money replacing the old voting machines, Gillette said.

Mail-in precincts in Tooele

County commission studies plans to divide county up for new governmentTIM GILLIEEDITOR

The process of dividing up Tooele County for a new form of county government has started.

Maps depicting five dif-ferent proposed plans to divide Tooele County into five districts for the election of county council members were displayed in the hallway of the county building during the Tooele County Commission’s Aug. 6 meeting.

The division of the county into council districts is required by the change in county gov-ernment approved by voters in the November 2018 election. That new form of government will replace the current three-member commission with a part time, five-member county

council and a hired manager.The county council districts

need to be approved by the current County Commission in time for candidates to file and run for election to the council in the November 2020 elec-tion.That election could start as early as January 2020.

State code gives the respon-sibility of determining the dis-trict boundaries to the county’s legislative body, which at this time is the County Commission, according to Tooele County Attorney Scott Broadhead

Broadhead told the Tooele County Government Study Committee that the county clerk would draw up proposed boundaries to be approved by

Tooele City Council approves $2.3M solid waste fund transferSTEVE HOWESTAFF WRITER

The Tooele City Council approved a $2.3 million transfer from its solid waste fund to the capital projects fund during its meeting last Wednesday.

The one-time transfer followed a mailed public notice and a public hear-ing, moving a portion of the solid waste fund’s balance to pay for capital proj-ects and equipment. The solid waste fund handles the City’s trash and recy-clable collection.

Included in the transfer amount was $500,000 toward interior furnishing and equipment for the new police sta-tion. The city’s $9 million loan through the state’s Permanent Community Impact Fund Board to build the police station can’t be used toward internal furnishing and equipment.

The transfer is also earmarked to cover the costs of four new snow-plows, expected to be approximately $960,000, and airpacks for the Tooele City Fire Department.

The city’s snowplows are aging and in need of replacement, according to Tooele City Public Works Director Steve Evans.

A structure to store fire department apparatus on 1000 North was also dis-cussed by the City Council during the 5 p.m. work session last Wednesday, but more discussion was requested by Tooele City Fire Chief Rick Harrison. Concerns about the structural integrity

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Tooele County Deputy Clerk Holly Shields prepares and verifies signatures on ballots returned by voters for the primary election.

Andrew Furniss dives into the pool.

LIfeguard Lauren Wardle (right) watches divers and swimmers in the pool.

Swimmers enjoy the cool waters of the pool at the EnergySolutions Aquatic Center.

Mia Norton holds her nose while her father Matt Norton keeps her head above water at the EnergySolutions Aquatic Center Tuesday.

PHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE

WET AND WILD AT DESERET PEAK

Zander Labaka

(right) swims at the pool.

SEE WASTE PAGE A7 �

MBV 1000 to provide electronic voter signature verification forthis year’s municipal primary

SEE BALLOT PAGE A7 �

SEE DIVIDE PAGE A7 �

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TUESDAY August 13, 2019A2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

TIM GILLIEEDITOR

Thursday’s rain left stand-ing water on the Bonneville Salt Flats, delaying the start of Speed Week, according to the event’s organizers.

Racing was scheduled to start at 7:30 this morning, Bill Lattin, president of the Southern California Timing Association, told the Transcript Bulletin in an interview Monday.

“We will start Tuesday morning,” Lattin said. “The salt

flats are OK for racing. They’ve been better and they’ve been worse. Last year the salt was really good and some of the drivers got spoiled.”

The Southern California Timing Association puts on the annual Speed Week on the Bonneville Salt Flats. Speed Week draws racers from all over the world who drive hot rods, roadsters, belly tankers, lakesters, motorcycles, stream-liners, and diesel trucks that want to run the International Speedway in an attempt to set

a world speed record.Wet conditions and a thin

layer of salt caused the SCTA to cancel Speed Week in 2014 and 2015.

Even with the late start, Lattin said he expects Speed Week will wrap up as planned with the last day of racing to be held on Friday.

Spectators can purchase entry passes at the entrance to the salt. The pass allows spec-tators to walk through the pits, view the vehicles, and talk to the drivers and crew members.

The SCTA advises specta-tors to bring a hat, sunglasses, and shade. All semi-permanent spectator areas require a tarp flooring as a covering on the salt.

Binoculars are also recom-mended as the race vehicles are a quarter mile way when they run on the race course.

Vendors will be on site with food, eyewear, sunscreen and

more, according to the SCTA.The Bonneville Salt Flats

International Speedway is located north of Interstate 80 near Wendover, Utah. The salt flats are approximately a 10.6-mile drive away from I-80’s exit 4.

Additional information about Speedweek can be found at [email protected]

Changes come to UTA’s service offerings across Tooele ValleySTEVE HOWESTAFF WRITER

Significant changes to expand Utah Transit Authority bus offerings in Tooele County went into effect on Monday, giving more public transportation options to residents.

Route 451 will now offer

five buses on weekday morn-ings with transportation to Salt Lake City, with the first bus at 5:04 a.m. The bus leaves from 307 N. Main St. and will stop at 400 S. Main St., 60 N. 200 West, 1000 N. Main St. and the 2400 North park and ride in Tooele City, as well as the Benson

Gristmill in Stansbury Park, and 600 S. State St. and 100 S. 300 West in Salt Lake City.

The bus will depart about every half hour until 7 a.m., taking up 1 hour and 15 minutes to reach downtown Salt Lake. The first afternoon bus departs from 100 S. 300 West at 3:44 p.m., with buses about every 30 minutes, until the last departs at 5:48 p.m.

The F453 route, which runs on weekdays, will travel between the Tooele City park and ride at 2400 North and the Trax train stop at 1940 W. North Temple, with stops at Benson Gristmill, the Lake Point junction and the International Center in Salt Lake. The earliest bus leaves from 2400 North at 9 a.m. and the last leaves the North Temple Trax station at 2:55 p.m., with buses approximately once an hour over that time.

The F454 route, with ser-vice from the intersection of Durfee St. and state Route 112 in Grantsville to 402 S. State St. in Salt Lake City, will leave approximately every 30 minutes from 5:11 a.m. to 7:07 a.m. on week-days. The route includes

stops at the intersection of Main and Orchard streets and Main Street and SR-112 in Grantsville, the Benson Gristmill, Lake Point junction, the International Center, Salt Lake International Airport and 300 W. North Temple St. in Salt Lake.

Route F400 has also been changed, which makes sev-eral stops within Tooele City. The route stops at Tooele Technical College, the Utah State University extension, Remington Apartments, 400 N. Main St., 1000 N. Main St. and the 2400 North park and ride, with the earliest stop at 5:35 a.m. and the latest at 6:53 p.m.

UTA Trustee Kent Millington spoke about the changes to the bus system during the Tooele City Council meeting on Aug. 7. During his presentation to the City Council, Millington discussed the new ser-vices and the hopes it would expand ridership in the county.

“We’re grateful for the opportunity to be of service to those here in Tooele,” Millington said. “We under-stand that there’s a little bit of growth happening here so we want to be responsive to that growth. We think this will help us be responsive for the next year and we know that there will need to be some additional changes when that time comes as well.”

More information about the changes can be found at rideuta.com/tooele. [email protected]

BACK TO SCHOOL CLOSET

ADMINISTRATION

Scott C. Dunn PublisherJoel J. Dunn Publisher Emeritus

OFFICE

Bruce Dunn ControllerChris Evans Office Manager Vicki Higgins Customer ServiceMakenna Bergen Circulation Manager

EDITORIAL

Tim Gillie EditorDavid Bern Editor-at-LargeDarren Vaughan Sports EditorFrancie Aufdemorte Photo EditorSteve Howe Staff WriterMark Watson Correspondent

ADVERTISING

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

LAYOUT & DESIGN

John Hamilton Creative DirectorLiz Arellano Graphic Artist

PRODUCTION

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

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OFFICE HOURS: Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., closed Saturday and Sunday.

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

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written consent of the editor or publisher.

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

Stansbury Days set for weekend of community fun for everyoneSTEVE HOWESTAFF WRITER

A parade, food trucks, races and car shows will all be a part of Stansbury Park’s annual com-munity days, set to begin this Friday evening.

Festivities get underway on Friday, with food trucks at Porter Way Park presented by the Food Truck League from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. After grabbing something to eat, attendees can head down to the lawn near the Stansbury Clubhouse for a spe-cial showing of Pixar’s “A Bug’s Life,” courtesy of Mosquito Squad.

The following morning, the Stansbury Days Triathlon begins with the sprint triathlon at 7 a.m., with athletes complet-ing a 500-meter swim, 12-mile

bike and 3.1-mile run. Younger competitors aged 13-17 can compete in a super sprint triath-lon, while there will be a kids tri for those aged 5-12.

The Stansbury Days Parade will begin at 10 a.m., begin-ning at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on Bayshore Drive, then turning right onto Lakeside Drive. The parade continues to Lakeview, then Clubhouse Drive and past the Stansbury Clubhouse. The route ends where Clubhouse Drive meets with Country Club Drive.

Following the parade will be a car show, which will be held on the greenspace adja-cent to the Stansbury Park Improvement building off Stansbury Parkway. The car

show, which runs from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., will culminate with an awards ceremony at 2:30 p.m.

There will also be a card-board boat race, a Stansbury Park tradition, held at noon and 12:30 p.m. at Stansbury Lake. The race is broken into two groups, ages 5-12 and 13 and older.

Awards will be presented to the first-place finisher in each age group, the cardboard boat with the best overall design and the Titanic, for the best sinking ship.

Stansbury Days is hosted by Stansbury Park Community Events, a nonprofit that spon-sors and organizes events and activities in Stansbury Park. [email protected]

TTB FILE PHOTO

Cousins Jennipher Jimenez and Jesus Correa at last year’s Stansbury Days.

Parents and students (above left) line up to go school shopping at the Back-to-School Closet held at Blue Peak High School on Aug. 3. Student Matthew Briggs (above) tries on his new shoes at the event. Father-daughter team James and Sophie Hanson (far left) pick a backpack. Randee Kathan (left) finds a shirt she likes.SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO

Rain delayed start of Speed WeekOrganizer says racing started today, will run through Friday

We’re always looking for newsTRANSCRIPT

BULLETINTOOELEContact us today 435.882.0050

or [email protected]

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TUESDAY August 13, 2019 A3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

So many ways to ride UTA in Tooele County.Find yours.

For routes, rates and more, visit rideuta.com.

Go more places in Tooele County – or even into Salt Lake – with UTA. Whether it’s bus, flex route, on-demand or vanpool, if you have somewhere to be, UTA has you covered.

Flex RoutesFlex Routes are bus routes with a twist of customization. They can pick you up and drop you off within ¾ of a mile from their scheduled route at your home or business. Our two Flex Routes run in Tooele City, connecting school campuses, downtown, medical facilities and starting August 12, 2019 we are excited to introduce a new mid-day Tooele to Salt Lake service. This new Flex Route will run from the 2400 North Park & Ride in Tooele to 1950 West North Temple in Salt Lake between the hours of 8 AM and 4 PM. Find routing and schedules at rideuta.com/services/flex.

Salt Lake ServiceEveryone’s commute is made easier with routes from Grantsville and Tooele connecting in Stansbury Park into the International Center, airport and downtown. Start your workday stress-free and let us do the driving. Watch for additional commuter service times beginning August 12, 2019.

VanpoolWork at Dugway, Tooele Army Depot, the VA in Salt Lake or some other location? A vanpool is probably headed in your direction already. And with the option of pretax dollars to offset the cost, it makes for a smart move. Visit rideuta.com/vanpool to see how.

On-Demand ServiceGive us 24 hour notice, and we’ll pick you up and drop you off M-F, 7am-7pm from designated stops in Tooele, Stansbury Park or Grantsville. Wheelchair accessible vehicles are available. To schedule your ride, call 435-843-4114.

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TUESDAY August 13, 2019A4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

Let her go!This letter is in response to the

Transcript Bulletin article in the Aug. 6 edition on page A5 entitled “Newborn at hospital tests positive for opiates and amphetamines,” with the subhead “Erda woman charged with felony endangerment of baby.”

We recently saw laws in New York State allowing abortion of an infant up to and including the date of delivery. In a society so torn apart by whether or not we should as a society allow the bloody sacrifice of our children on medical tables on the grounds of convenience, it is appall-ing that we would prosecute a mother who has chosen not to run her infant through the bowels of Baal (today we call him convenience, but it’s the same act for the same purpose).

Human sacrifice has followed the

human population since Cain killed Abel. It seems to me that a society that is trying to restrict abortion (as Utah state seems to be trying to do) should quit persecuting women who choose not to slaughter their young. Leave this poor woman alone! She obviously has a problem with drugs. Her problem did not extend to mur-dering her child. Let her go and place the baby, who was left at the hospital, with a suitable adoptive family.

I have seven adopted children, several of whom were birthed by women who had a drug problem but chose life for their child. I, for one, am grateful that the women who chose adoption for my children were allowed to do so in peace.

Roseanne WilkinsTooele

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

OUR VIEW

After nine months of work by a consultant, along with several town hall meetings and hearings to gather input from citizens, Grantsville City Hall now has to choose whether or not to approve a new general plan to help guide the community with future land use decisions for the next 10 years.

Because of a moderate income housing component now required by the state of all current or new general plans, the Grantsville City Council must approve the document on or before Dec. 1.

That date is more than three months away. But comments made dur-ing last week’s City Council meeting suggest the City may need lots of time to finalize the plan that is intended to advise on new zoning, revis-ing existing zoning, or other ordinances, and provide direction and goals for land use, community design, economic development, transportation, housing, recreation, open space and infrastructure.

As reported in last Thursday’s edition, the draft 58-page, $66,000 document, which has been in the works since last November, is now under review by the Grantsville City Planning Commission and City Council. The Wasatch Front Regional Council provided a $60,000 grant for the plan with the rest paid for by City Hall.

At last Wednesday’s City Council meeting, the council and Mayor Brent Marshall spent several minutes discussing the draft plan and pointed out concerns. Marshall said the plan has Main Street turning into “a long apartment row, ” and Councilman Scott Stice said the plan looks like a compilation of citizens’ comments.

“We (the City Council) will have to figure out how to put the pieces together,” Stice said to the consultant. “… Your organization is getting paid a lot of money. Seems to me the plan should be more tight. I’d like to see it more precise.”

Councilman Jeff Hutchins said the draft plan includes suggestions that conflict with citizen feedback he’s received. He said, “people want more places to eat, but they also want to stop growth.”

Ben Levinger of Rural Community Consultants, Springville, told the City Council that citizens who provided feedback said they didn’t want high-density housing scattered throughout the community, and they wanted Main Street preserved for commercial use. Levinger also said the general plan is a guiding document, not a strategic plan that provides specifics of “who, what, when, where and how.”

Although general plans for municipalities and counties in Utah are considered to be an advisory document, the Legislature does give such plans some teeth. In section 10-9a-406 of Utah Code, it states, “After the legislative body has adopted a general plan, no street, park, or other public way, ground, place, or space, no publicly owned building or struc-ture, and no public utility, whether publicly or privately owned, may be constructed or authorized until and unless it conforms to the current general plan.”

The planning commission and City Council are urged to carefully further refine the draft general plan — but without ignoring invaluable citizen input gathered since last November — to make the document effective in responding to future growth, while also being respectful of Grantsville’s values. By doing so, no one will have to “figure out how to put the pieces together.”

At some point in the late 1960s, you could be forgiv-en for thinking that the FBI

was in charge of the KKK. It conducted an operation that

infiltrated, manipulated and ran the group into the ground. With violent white hate again on the rise, we should take some inspira-tion — even if the methods can’t be replicated — from the FBI’s past grappling with racist extrem-ists.

If there were any doubt that the country has a white nationalist problem, the shocking attack on an El Paso, Texas, Walmart should remove it. These self-radicalizing freaks, a subset of the broader mass-shooting phenomenon, take inspiration from prior acts of vicious mayhem and cheer high body counts on internet message boards. They are domestic subver-sives and terrorists, and deserve to be treated as such.

There is no doubt that if we had suffered a string of massacres on our soil carried out by Islamic radicals, we’d do everything in our power to diminish and hopefully eradicate the danger — indeed, we have. The national response to racist extremists should show the same alacrity and resolve, while acknowledging that they represent a different, more-difficult-to-coun-ter threat than the old Klan.

In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson told FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover to go after the Klan as he had the Communists. Running until 1971 and involving 26 field offices, COINTELPRO-White Hate targeted groups and people deemed violent threats, not their ideology per se.

The effort was comprehen-sive and no-holds-barred. In his history of the FBI, Tim Weiner writes, “The FBI dangled small fortunes before potential KKK informers, offered outright bribes

to Klansmen who could serve as double agents inside state and local police forces, planted bugs and wiretaps in Klaverns, carried out black-bag jobs to steal mem-bership lists and (on at least one occasion) dynamite caches.”

The FBI worked to preempt vio-lent acts, and gained an enormous influence over Klan groups. The New Orleans office was so suc-cessful at degrading the Louisiana chapter of the UKA that the office’s concern became propping the group up, lest its disintegra-tion loosen the FBI’s control.

Overall, Klan membership shrank from an estimated 14,000 members in 1964 to 4,300 in 1971. Per Shelton himself, “the FBI’s counterintelligence program hit us in membership and weak-ened us for about 10 years.”

Of course, the contemporary FBI obviously isn’t going to take over the “alt-right,” nor should we want it to. The abuses of the COINTELPRO programs — the FBI also targeted civil-rights groups and the New Left, among others — became notorious when they were exposed in the 1970s.

There are also practical obsta-cles to the FBI duplicating its anti-Klan work. The Klan was an orga-nization, whereas today’s white supremacists are free-floating haters posting anonymously on the internet.

Enough with violent white supremacists Politics always focus on power, not morals

Time to chooseGrantsville City urged to carefully further refine its draft

general plan — without ignoring invaluable citizen input

GUEST OPINION

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Editor Tim [email protected]

435-882-0050

GUEST OPINION

Those angry loner white boys with guns, this time in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, have

again erupted on the body politic.And those with eyes to see are

reminded that the American culture is ill.

But what of the mass shootings in Chicago, the 55 people shot over the weekend, with seven hit near a park and then eight more not far away?

You might think these are “mass shootings” too, but, in political/media terms, they’re not treated as such. The victims, and in all likelihood the shooters, are black. And Democratic politicians find no political advantage in weaponizing the victims of every-day street violence in a Democratic town. So Chicago’s dead are stepped over by national media and national Democrats on the way to 2020.

Republicans want the focus moved from President Donald Trump and his idiotic, often incendiary tweets to the violence in Baltimore and Chicago. Presidential daughter Ivanka Trump tweeted, somewhat desperately, “we mustn’t become numb to the violence faced by inner city communities every day.”

Nice try, but she failed, and she was immediately condemned. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, under pressure to do something, anything, about the slaughter, must be thank-ful that the Trumps give her cover and a target for sarcasm. Lightfoot dismissed Ivanka Trump’s tweets as “nonsense.”

Babies shot in Chicago? Poor peo-ple terrorized daily? Cops and para-medics pushed to the breaking point?

They’re largely forgotten. In politi-cal terms it’s all about those white boys with their guns.

Democrats wrap them around Trump’s neck, focusing on a key voter block, suburban white women with those “Hate Has No Home Here” signs. For two years, the left and media have shrieked unproven allegations about Trump and collu-sion with Russia. Now that has faded, Democrats adeptly find themselves on comfortable, familiar ground: race.

The white boys are indeed domes-tic terrorists, some white suprema-cists, like the one charged with

slaughtering innocents in El Paso, hating on Latin immigrants, legal and illegal, echoing Trump’s use of the word “invasion,” and writing a bizarre manifesto. “I figured that an under-prepared attack and a meh manifesto is better than attack and no manifesto,” it read.

And while politicians of both par-ties argue endlessly about how many devils can fit on the edge of a knife, America knows there are more of them out there, waiting to pop.

Years ago, before Trump was elect-ed president, there were white boys with guns too, slaughtering inno-cents. And those of us who made the culture argument back then, rather than advocate ripping the Second Amendment out of the Bill of Rights, were denounced, predictably, as know-nothing conservatives.

There had already been tens of millions of legal abortions serving as grim building blocks of an American death cult. And there were increas-ingly violent video games that fed the isolation, growing nihilism and misogyny in those sad, angry, men-tally disturbed boys who nonetheless pass their background checks, buy their guns and make the news.

Now? They are lost in public schools that teach them about their toxic masculinity, they are loners, they are armed, in a culture that turns its face away from God.

But Trump is president now, and his constantly belligerent rhetoric, used to wage war against the corrupt status quo, has given the left great license to conflate complicated issues. They see opportunity and power to be had, and before the victims from El Paso and Dayton were buried, the dead were weaponized.

Democratic presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke, flailing and desper-ate for attention, eagerly picked up on the prompts given him by former Democratic political staffers turned TV news anchors. He blamed Trump for El Paso and pronounced the

president a racist. Other Democrats denounced him as well, even Sen. Bernie Sanders, the socialist of Vermont, who should know better.

Because it was also a crazy white madman who stalked those Republican Congressmen as they played baseball in a park in 2017 and tried to massacre them all with a rifle. He was a Sanders supporter and the cry went up wherever we talk politics, in the common square and in newsrooms, that blaming the left for the insane actions of an insane man would be unthinkable.

The shooter in Dayton was, report-edly, of the political left and a sup-porter of Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren, but you don’t hear much of that, do you?

In other, saner times, leveraging the political persuasions of absolute madmen against a political opponent would be a signal for a gentleman to rise from the table and leave the room without comment. But now it is the blood of our politics.

Yet, whenever I feel that our politics and culture are beyond redemption, someone comes along to prove me wrong, like U.S. Army Pfc. Glendon Oakley Jr. He was at that Walmart in El Paso when the shooting began. Oakley, who has a concealed carry license, ran toward the sound of gunfire, to save as many children as he could. Later, talking about what happened, he sought to direct the media spotlight away from himself and toward the grieving fami-lies. And he began to weep.

“I want to look out to the families that were lost and families that lost their children,” he said in El Paso, “because the focus should not be on me. It should be on what happened in Ohio, and what happened in Chicago and what happened yesterday.”

But the focus is not on them. And unfortunately, it is not on the moral courage of Pfc. Oakley.

Those who can be used in death will be used. And that who cannot be used will be stepped over. Politics doesn’t focus on moral virtue. Politics focuses on power.

John Kass is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune. His Twitter handle is @john_kass.

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

Letters written to thank an individual or organization should be submitted for “Notes of Appreciation.”

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

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

LETTERS POLICY

David J. BernEditor-at-Large

Timothy H. GillieEditor

Scott C. DunnPresident and Publisher

Joel J. DunnPublisher Emeritus

With the exception of the “Our View” column, the opinions expressed on this page, including the cartoon, are not necessarily endorsed by the Tooele Transcript Bulletin.

EDITORIAL BOARD

John KassGUEST COLUMNIST

SEE LOWRY PAGE A5 �

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Lawyers for a man accused of running a multi-million-dollar opioid ring out of his suburban Salt Lake City basement said Monday he was involved in drugs but wasn’t capable of running such a major opera-tion.

Aaron Shamo, 29, has a learning disability and atten-tion deficit hyperactivity dis-order that make him incapable of orchestrating the compli-cated scheme that prosecutors laid out in court documents, defense attorney Greg Skordas said during his opening state-ment at Shamo’s trial.

Prosecutors say several peo-ple will testify that Shamo ran the ring that mailed opioids laced with fentanyl to places across the U.S. and resulted in a fatal overdose.

”The evidence will not estab-lish that Aaron Shamo caused the death of another, or that he was the organizer, leader, mas-termind of this organization,” Skordas told jurors.

Fentanyl, a potent synthetic opioid, has exacerbated the country’s overdose epidemic in recent years.

The federal government’s case against Shamo is expected to offer a glimpse of how the drug, which has killed tens of thousands of Americans, can be imported from China, pressed into fake pills and sold through online black markets.

“Death, drugs and money. That’s why we’re here,” prose-cutor Michael Gadd said during his opening statement.

Prosecutors have alleged that dozens of the ring’s cus-tomers died in overdoses, though the defense disputes that and Shamo is charged only in connection to one: a 21-year-old identified as R.K., who died in 2016 after snorting fentanyl allegedly passed off as prescrip-tion oxycodone.

In a raid on the Shamo

home in the upscale suburb of Cottonwood Heights, agents found a still-running pill press in the basement, thousands of pills and more than $1 million in cash stuffed in garbage bags, according to court documents.

The group had started two years before, and grew to include more than a dozen people, some of whom Aaron Shamo met working at an eBay call center, court documents say.

Aaron Shamo ordered the fentanyl from China and paid a number of people to receive it at their homes and turn it over to him, according to authori-ties. He and another man cut the powder, added other fillers and pressed it into pills, using dyes and stamps to mimic the appearance of legitimate phar-maceuticals, prosecutors said.

Public health experts warn that such mom-and-pop drug trafficking networks can be especially dangerous: They cut and mix fentanyl — a few flakes of which can be deadly — without sophisticated equip-ment, meaning in a single batch, one counterfeit pill might contain little fentanyl and another enough to kill instantly.

Court documents say the pills were sold online, through a dark-web marketplace store called Pharma-Master. The dark web is a second layer of the internet reached by a spe-cial browser and often used for illegal activity.

Some were small orders from people buying for them-selves, prosecutors say, but in other cases, the group shipped thousands of pills in bulk to gang members and drug deal-ers who then resold them on the street, prosecutors allege.

Each pill cost less than a penny to make, and could be sold on the street as a legiti-mate pharmaceutical for $20 or more, prosecutors said.

Yet the FBI needs to be intensely focused on this threat. The bureau should

take an intelligence-based approach. It should monitor sewer message boards like 8chan, the forum for white-supremacist propaganda. Posters who cross from First Amendment-protected speech

to incitement should be pros-ecuted. The FBI should inter-view anyone expressing sym-pathy with terrorism — just as it does with suspected Islamic extremists — and surveil such persons as appropriate and

permitted under the law. El Paso was an outrage, and

surely not the last. We need to react accordingly.

Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

Our family serving your family

UTAH’SLARGEST

SELECTION OFRECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

for over 50 YEARS

www.tooeleeducationfoundation.org

By Clint Spindler

This time of year brings a great deal of anticipation and excitement for students and teachers -- especially teachers new to the teaching profession. Being a new classroom teacher is thrilling, but also accompanied by some doubt and anxiety as new teachers get ready to navigate their first teaching assignment.

To help with assimilating new teachers into Tooele County School District, TCSD master-mentors Debbie Bird, Jeanne Manzione, and Camille Clegg-Patch have been hard at work preparing new teachers for a successful and enjoyable first year of teaching. August 7th and 8th were days these teaching gurus dedicated to sharing guidelines, procedures, and expectations that will assist new teachers with being prepared for the first day of class.

Back in 1987 when I started my teaching career, TCSD didn’t have a formal mentoring program. Basically, new teachers were simply handed

the keys to their classroom and told…”See you in May!” Luckily, there were dedicated teachers in our schools willing to give of themselves and their time to ensure new teachers had assistance. TCSD has sure come a long way since then, and now has an excellent mentoring program to help new teachers feel welcomed and better prepared for the first days of school.

The mentor cadre invited TEF to participate in welcoming our new teachers by asking it to sponsor a luncheon for the new teachers. TEF was more than happy to oblige, and was able

to do so thanks to a generous donation made by Christensen & Griffith Construction Company. Our wonderful friends at Christensen & Griffith recognize the value of helping new teachers have a good first impression, and have been giving annually to this cause since 2014!

Having a mentor is important, not only in your first year but your entire career. Remember to always be a lifelong learner and to include your colleagues in processing new knowledge in ways that enhance teaching and learning. Also, relationships will make or break you as a teacher. Kids will work tirelessly for someone that cares about them. This doesn’t mean you need to try to be their friend. Just be genuine in who you are and show them that you will do whatever it takes (within reason) to help them succeed.

Welcome to Tooele County School District and our great community!

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

Welcome New Teachers!

Tooele Education Foundation

@TEFbellringerTEF staff, Clint Spindler and Linda Clegg, at TCSD’s new teacher institute.

TCSD Mentors, Jeanne Manzione (left) and Camille Clegg-Patch (background) sharing with teachers new to Tooele School District. Not pictured is mentor Debbie Bird.

Of all the emotions it would seem that love is the most written

about. You find it in poems, in songs, in movies and in plays. You even find it carved into wooden benches and trees. (That’s not necessarily good for the tree.)

Virtually every American of my generation knows the song, “All you need is love” by the Beatles. I can remember walking down the street or in a store and hearing people sing-ing that song while listening to a transistor radio, or just from memory. All you need is love was a mantra of the 60s and 70s.

But what kind of love are we talking about?

In a well-known passage in the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus was asked what is the most important commandment. Of course, He responded, likely quoting from Deuteronomy 6:5: “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength.” Then Jesus went on to tell us what the greatest commandment is in a rela-tionship between two people: “Love your neighbor as your-self.”

But how many times have you heard that as an encour-agement to be understanding and gentle with people, or to just let your neighbor alone, since who are we to judge one another? Just love your neigh-bor.

That certainly sounds noble

and compassionate. But is that what it means to really love your neighbor?

Have you ever looked up the passage Jesus quoted to see its context, and thereby God’s meaning of loving your neigh-bor? You’ll find it in Leviticus 19:18.

Context is important because it helps us to see the direction God is pointing us in regard to the issue at hand. In the case of Jesus’ quote, God was saying that if you love your neighbor, you won’t ignore his sin. Instead, you will lovingly but clearly point it out in an effort to help him correct himself.

If you read the surrounding verses, you find the respon-sibility and implications are clear. If you see your neighbor in sin or in error, and say noth-ing, you are in danger of devel-oping bitterness toward him because of his ignorance or his callous disregard for God’s ways. Thus, your lack of love for your neighbor can actually lead to a sinful bitterness in your own life.

Jesus was saying that if you truly love your neighbor, you will not ignore what is going on in their lives. You will do something about it, the direc-tion of which comes from the

wisdom of the Bible, not your preferences, nor from society’s allowances.

This is very critical in our day. Many of the problems we see around us that have over-whelmed the lives of so many often occur because we have bought into the world’s view of loving our neighbor to mean that we turn a blind eye and simply let them “go their own way.”

I can point to many areas of brokenness in lives all around us that come about simply because people wrongly think it is more loving to let some-one go their own way than to confront them and try to help them. I believe this is one of several reasons that many of the people in our society destroy their own lives in ways that our society has said must be left up to them alone, or by their acting out violently toward others, even to the point of taking other peoples’ lives.

An issue that is relevant today is that of mass shootings in our nation. We hear much about easy access to guns, or mental illness, some of which may play a part. But we don’t hear much about our respon-sibility to love our neighbor enough to confront them if we see a problem, in other words, to get involved.

Almost all of the mass shoot-ers taken alive have said that they felt alone, disconnected from society. They feel that no one really cares, so what does

it matter?Without a doubt many of

them push people away, but what would you want others to do if you were hurting and you pushed them away? Would you want them to shrug their shoulders and tell themselves, “Well, I tried,” or would you want them to continue to try and reach you in your dark-ness?

Jesus said to love your neighbor as yourself. That means you go after others you see at risk just like you would want them to go after you if you were at risk.

Godly love is not just a feel-ing; it is a commitment to care about the well being of some-one, even if you don’t much like them at the time. Let’s face it, I don’t like everything about me; why would you expect that I would like everything about you?

But if you love your neigh-bor, you will do whatever you can to call them back from the edge of darkness, from the edge of despair that may lead them to jump off, and even take others with them.

Understand, I am not so foolish to think that trying to love your neighbor as yourself will solve all the problems you encounter, but I truly believe it will solve some, and in the process it may help to avoid untold pain, misery, and even death.

Jon McCartney is pastor of First Baptist Church of Tooele.

Truly loving your neighbor is not about turning away when they sin

MATTERS OF FAITH

Jon McCartneyGUEST COLUMNIST

Lowrycontinued from page A4

Trial opens for man accused in opioid ring

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OBITUARIES

Charlotte A. GourleyCharlotte A. Gourley, 72,

passed away Aug. 7, 2019. At the time of her passing she was at home surrounded by her family and holding her loving husband’s hand.

Charlotte was born Dec. 12, 1946, to Bert C. Warenski and Marjorie Iverson. She married and later divorced Michael Weyland. They had five chil-dren: Laurie, Scott (Becky), Bert (Bobbie), Shane, and Chad. June 1986, she married her best friend Paul F. Gourley and gained two children, Ronald (Shannon) and Loree Brockman.

She was known for her ath-letic abilities throughout high

school and later in her adult life. She enjoyed billiards, trap shooting, and fast pitch softball, and she shared her talents with her sons. She had a knack for crafts and cooking and especially enjoyed creat-ing Dutch ovens with her sons. With Paul by her side, she enjoyed trap shooting, camp-ing, fishing, traveling, and was a member of the Eagle’s and Good Sam’s Club.

She was preceded in death by her son, Shane; parents; brothers, Lindon (LueRae) Burr and Roger; sister, Sherrie (Wayne) Tucker; and her furry friend Spooker. She is survived by her children; sister, Wanda

(Wesley) Payne; 25 grandchil-dren; 26 great-grandchildren; one great-great-grandchild; pup, Lucky; and numerous nieces and nephews.

We would like to give our heartfelt gratitude to Harmony Home Health & Hospice for their caring support during her final days.

A graveside service will be held Monday, Aug. 12, 2019 at 11 a.m. in the Grantsville City Cemetery in the care of Dalton-Hoopes Funeral Home, Grantsville. Condolences and memories may be shared at daltonhoopes.com

Carma Henderson VorwallerCarma Henderson Vorwaller, 79, of Indio, California, passed

away Aug. 7, 2019. FitzHenry-Wiefels, Indio, has been entrusted with arrangements.

DEATH NOTICE

Robert Brent Millward

Robert Brent Millward, 85, returned to his Heavenly Father on Aug. 8, 2019.

Brent was born on Jan. 1, 1934, in Salt Lake City, Utah, to Hyrum Marlowe and Eva Jensen Millward. He graduated from Grantsville High School where he played tennis, bas-ketball and football. He served in the United States Army in Germany from 1958-1962. He played the trombone in the army band and loved to tell his family about performing overseas. He retired from Little America after working there for 21 years.

Brent was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He served as a temple worker in the Salt

Lake Temple in the baptistry for many years.

He is survived by his wife, Madge; children, Bobby,

Cherie, Sydney, Linda, Brenda, David, Scott, Ruth, David, Jerry, Susan, Deana and Holly; siblings, Don and Larry; and many grandchildren and great-grandchildren. He was pre-ceded in death by his parents; brothers, Lynn and Byron; and four grandchildren.

A funeral is scheduled for 1 p.m., Aug. 14, at the Grantsville West Stake Center, 115 E. Cherry St. A viewing will be held one hour prior. Interment to follow at the Grantsville City Cemetery. The family would like to thank Rocky Mountain Hospice, especially Jenny Eva and Tina Stewart for their lov-ing care. Services entrusted with Didericksen Memorial, 435-277-0050.

Donna Lorraine (Schoss) HallMarch 28, 1943 ~ Aug. 10, 2019

Donna Lorraine (Schoss) Hall died peacefully Saturday, Aug. 10, 2019, from natural causes. She was 76 years old. Donna was born March 28, 1943, to Loren Tueller Schoss and Eldora Glee Pence in Inglewood, California.

She was raised for most of her young life in Ogden, Utah. She graduated from Ogden High School in 1961. Donna married Richard L. Hall on Dec. 11, 1963, in Ogden. She and Richard moved to Bountiful where they raised their daughter. Donna and Richard were later divorced.

Donna worked at Sperry Univac for a short while and then moved to Litton Industries where she worked building guidance and control

systems for airplanes. She excelled in this position and was able to lead as a supervi-sor until she became disabled in 1986. Donna was a hard worker and had an exceptional work ethic.

She moved to Grantsville in 1999 to be closer to her daugh-ter’s family. Donna resided at Willow Wood Care Center in Salt Lake City for the final four

years of her life. She is a mem-ber of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and she enjoyed attending church and going to the temple.

Donna was known for her kindness to all who knew her. She was a beautiful ballroom dancer and she loved to dance at the Terrace Ballroom in Salt Lake City. She was the queen of the dance floor and danced every dance. She also loved to make arts and crafts. She and her daughter spent many hours doing crafts together.

Donna suffered from men-tal illness all her life. Even through all of her fears and hardship she was a wonderful daughter, mother and grand-mother, who loved her Savior and family above all else. She valiantly endured to the end and is now at peace with her family who have passed through the veil.

Donna was preceded in death by her parents and grandparents. She is sur-

vived by her daughter, Dixie (Devron) Brown, Grantsville, Utah; and her seven grandchil-dren, Gabrielle (Jacob) Lee of Plainfield, Indiana, Delci (Trevor) Harding of Monterey, California, Jansen (Lannie) Asiata of Grantsville, Utah, Ada (Clark) Mathews of Las Vegas, Nevada, Emma, Samuel, and Luke. 

There will be a viewing at 10 a.m. with a cryptside ser-vice at 11 a.m., Wednesday, Aug. 14, in the Mausoleum at Leavitt’s Mortuary and Aultorest Memorial Park, 836 36th St., Ogden, Utah. She will be laid to rest next to her mother. 

We would like to thank Willow Wood Care Center and Silverado Hospice for the lov-ing care and kindness given to Donna. She left this life peace-fully and well cared for. 

Condolences may be sent to the family at: www.leavitts-mortuary.com

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NOTE OF APPRECIATIONThank you for the out-

pouring of love and kindness shown to us by family, friends, neighborhood, church and community at this time of our Father’s passing. The compas-sionate service so lovingly rendered to us through cards, food, flowers, stamps, money donations, visits, and expres-sions of sympathy and con-dolences have brought great comfort and peace. Thank you for your many prayers and thoughts during his final

days. We appreciate all of the medical staff who have cared for him and extended such devotion for his well-being. We appreciate the loving support and comfort you have given to us and count it as a choice blessing. May you feel of our gratitude.

Darrell and Carol JohnsonJohn and Carol CluffVan and Susie JohnsonRay and Kathy JohnsonMichelle and Sean Johnson

Karen DeSpainKaren DeSpain passed away

unexpectedly in her sleep Friday, Aug. 9, 2019. She was born Oct. 23, 1957, in Murray, Utah, to Rolin and Judy DeSpain.

She graduated from Tooele High School in 1976 and cur-rently worked as a business analyst for the State of Utah. She also loved to travel.

Karen made her home in Olympia, Washington, for 20 years where she was able to be near her daughter and grand-children and see her grand-children grow up. They were without question the loves of her life.

Karen will be dearly missed by her daughter, Lindsay; son-in-law, Jeff; grandchil-dren, Braydon, Michael, Mitchell, and Ashlin; her mother, Judy Evans Morris of Tooele; brother, Russell (Teresa) DeSpain; sister-in-law, WonYoung DeSpain Johnston; and brother, Michael (Cheryl) DeSpain. She is also survived

by her cousin and best friend, Stacey Bice, and by numerous aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces, nephews, and friends.

She was preceded in death by her father, Rolin DeSpain; brother, Loyd DeSpain; and her step-father, James Morris.

A memorial service will be held Thursday, Aug. 15, 2019, 11 a.m., at Tate Mortuary, 110 S. Main St., Tooele, Utah. Visitation will be held from 10 to 11 a.m. prior to the service.

Ryan Shupe brings a close to Fridays on Vine concert seriesSTEVE HOWESTAFF WRITER

A familiar closing act will take the stage for the final show of the Fridays on Vine summer concert series.

Ryan Shupe and the Rubberband will be back on the Aquatic Center Park stage this Friday, closing out the con-cert series as they did in 2016 and 2017. The band combines the rock side of their music with acoustic instruments; Shupe is an accomplished fid-dler, guitarist and mandolin player.

Shupe described the band’s music as “rock ‘n’ roll blue-grass” or “newgrass” in a 2016 interview with the Transcript

Bulletin. The band regularly performs original music, as well as a version of Charlie Daniels’ “The Devil Went Down to Georgia.”

Since its founding in 1996, Ryan Shupe and the Rubberband have produced eight albums, with the most recent release “We Rode On” in 2017. The song, “Dream Big,” debuted at No. 13 on the Billboard charts in 2005 and has more than 1.4 million listens on Spotify and 626,000 views on YouTube.

While the band performs at festivals, concert series and special events around the country, they’re also no strang-ers to the national stage, per

the band’s website, shupe.net. They’ve performed on Good Morning America, E! TV, and CMT.

This summer, Ryan Shupe and the Rubberband have per-formed at a number of venues, with a performance at Canyon Village at Park City set for this Thursday and another at North Ogden Amphitheater next Monday.

Fridays on Vine starts at 7 p.m. at Aquatic Center Park, 200 W. Vine Street. The con-certs are free to the public, but seating is limited. Patrons are encouraged to bring a blanket or lawn chair. [email protected]

FRIDAYS ON VINE

COURTESY OF RYAN SHUPE

Ryan Shupe is set to take the stage on Friday night to close out the Fridays on Vine concert series this week. Shupe is a 5th generation fiddle player that plays a mix of rock and roll and blue grass he calls “newgrass.”

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the County Commission.Tooele County Clerk Marilyn

Gillette has five proposed county council district plans available on her website at www.co.tooele.ut.us/clerk/council-district-maps.htm.

Following the 2020 election, the five-member county coun-cil will be the county’s legisla-tive body.

The County Council will have the authority, by state code, to pass ordinances, rules and regulations — including amendments to the general plan, land use ordinances, and zoning designations, levy taxes, approve the annual bud-get, investigate county officers, audit county officers, set the salary of elected officials, veto hiring decisions of elected officials, and to consolidate or separate elected county offices.

The County Council will hire

a full time county manager who will perform the executive functions for the county gov-ernment.

In the November 2020 elec-tion, three county council districts will vote and select a council member for their district.

County Commissioners Tom Tripp and Kendall Thomas will become county council mem-bers representing their districts as of Jan. 1, 2021. They will serve as county council mem-bers for two years.

The change in government study committee report doesn’t address the issue of what will happen if Tripp, who lives in Grantsville, and Thomas in Stockton, end up in the same district.

Commissioner Shawn Milne, whose county commission term expires in Jan. 2021, would need to file to run for election to county council, if he desires to serve on the county council.

During the 2022 election,

voters in Tripp and Thomas’ districts will select council members for their districts who will serve four-year terms.

This process creates three four-year council members elected during every presiden-tial election and two four-year council members elected in every midterm election.

The county council districts must be contiguous and have no greater than a 10%, prefer-ably not greater than 5%, dif-ference in population, accord-ing to Gillette.

Out of the five plans, plan 5 is a rework of plan 1 to cor-rect a problem with one of the districts not being contiguous, Gillette said.

Plan 3 is the sample district plan outlined in the change of government committee’s report. The other plans were developed by Gillette with help from the clerk’s office staff and the county’s Geographic Information System staff.

The County Commission has not set a timetable for adop-

tion of county council districts. County Commission Chairman Tom Tripp said the commis-sion welcomes input from the public by mail, phone or elec-tronically.

The plans are available to view at www.co.tooele.ut.us/clerk/[email protected]

County and statewide have a history of a higher rate of voter turnout, so part of the rationale of changing to vote-by-mail was also to increase voter participa-tion, she said.

The almost 50 percent voter turnout in the 2018 primary, which Gillette believes is a new record for a primary election in the county, supported that claim, according to Gillette.

The MBV is part of the tech-nology used to speed up vote counting while maintaining the integrity of the voting process, according to Gillette.

When voting by mail, vot-ers mark their ballot, put it in an envelope, and then sign the outside of the envelope to verify their identity as the regis-tered voter who completed the enclosed ballot.

When ballots are received at the clerk’s office and they are ready to be counted, the strip of paper on the outside of the ballot envelope that covers the signature is removed.

Batches of 50 ballots are pro-cessed in the MBV, which reads the barcode and captures an image of the signature.

The barcode is a unique bal-lot and voter identifier. If the barcode indicates the ballot is ineligible, the MBV kicks the envelope out into a tray for exceptions.

For example, if a voter calls the clerk’s office and said they didn’t get a ballot in the mail and requests a new ballot to be sent, the clerk’s office marks the barcode associated with the first ballot as ineligible.

This process makes sure that only one ballot per voter is counted, according to Gillette.

The bar code data is also separately uploaded by the clerk’s office into a database that allows voters to log into the state website — vote.utah.gov — and verify that their bal-

lot was received and validated by the county clerk.

The MBV also kicks out a ballot into the exception tray when it can’t read the barcode, find a signature, or if the enve-lope is too thin — indicating it doesn’t contain a ballot.

The exceptions are then manually followed up by the clerk’s office.

The signature is captured by the MBV as an electronic image and sent to a secure computer where the signature is verified by using the latest signature verification technology.

The county is able to deter-mine the level of confidence before the software rejects a signature match.

For ballots that can’t be verified by the computer, the software displays the scanned ballot signature along with an electronic copy of the signature the clerk’s office has on file.

A clerk’s office employee reviews the signatures; if they match, the ballot is processed.

The clerk’s office has access to up to five different signa-tures for each voter.

If no match is possible, the ballot is pulled and the voter is contacted. If possible, the error is cleared up and the ballot is counted.

“I call the voter and we hear things like the ballot was signed by a spouse,” Gillette said.

After the signatures are verified, the ballot envelope is cut open by a machine, the

ballot is manually removed and unfolded.

The top envelope of the batch of 50 is affixed with a sticker with a report printed by the computer. The report includes the date, time, number and status of the ballots.

Once a ballot is removed from the envelope there is nothing on the ballot identify-ing the voter. This preserves the anonymity of the voter, making it impossible to look up how any individual voter voted, Gillette said.

The ballots are run through a reader that electronically captures a picture of each ballot and records the votes cast in its memory. The scanner can read 100 ballots in two minutes.

Ballots dropped off, received by mail, dropped off in a bal-lot return box, or at the clerk’s office prior to the close of the polls on election night are pro-cessed to this point — they are verified, opened, and scanned — but there is no vote count available.

After polls close, the infor-mation from the pre-scanned ballots are downloaded onto a memory stick and transferred

to a secure computer that tabu-lates the votes.

If the software is unable to read a ballot, the ballot pops up on a screen. An election worker acting as an “adjudicator” can view a picture of the ballot. If the voter’s intent is clear, the adjudicator can direct the com-puter to count the vote as the voter intended.

Election workers bring in the ballots from poll locations and drop off boxes and they are processed similar to the ballots that were previously received by mail.

The MBV, the ballot scanner and the election computers are never connected to the internet, making it impossible for an out-side hacker to get into the vote counting system, according to Gillette.

The county must keep the envelopes and ballots for at least 22 months so it can respond to random sample audit requirements from the State Elections office.

If needed the clerk’s office can also re-run the process and duplicate the vote results, Gillette said.

As of Tuesday morning as

polls were opening, the County Clerk’s office had processed 3,578 ballots or 17.5% of all ballots mailed out.

In the 2017 municipal pri-mary, voter turnout was 19.1%.

The 2017 primary included Tooele and Grantsville cities. The 2019 primary includes Tooele City and Stansbury [email protected]

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of the current fire station were cited as reasons to explore the additional fire apparatus stor-age adjacent to the AirMed heli-copter pad.

During the public hearing at Wednesday’s meeting, resi-

dents questioned how the solid waste fund balance had grown so large, whether the city has implemented a capital equip-ment replacement plan and if the money could be spent on other projects or equipment.

In the public notice mailed to residents, the City addressed the balance of the solid waste fund, which is funded by fees for trash collection and recy-cling.

“Due to the fluctuation in various fees paid by the Solid Waste Fund an excess of Fund Balance has been created over many years in this fund,” the notice said. “This trend is not expected to continue as costs are increasing and new services such as community clean up days are now being provided. There are no proposed changes to the fees paid for this service.”[email protected]

Wastecontinued from page A1

MARK WATSONCORRESPONDENT

The second annual “A Yuletide Feast” will be held at Celebration Hall in Grantsville the first week in December.

Director Pamela Dale is seeking extra singers and musicians for this year’s cel-ebration.

“I felt like last year was a great success,” Dale said. “People loved the food and we had compliments on the music. We had about 12 sing-ers in the chorus and would like to increase that to about 18 or 20.”

Tryouts for singers and

musicians will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. at the Grantsville Library.

She said singers and musicians should come pre-pared to present a favorite Christmas carol during the open auditions.

“In addition to singers, we’re looking for a few more people to add to our brass ensemble,” Dale said. “We have our core group, but we need more. We’re holding tryouts to draw out Tooele’s best musicians. We also would like to add younger performers to our group.”

Dale said the pageant is based on the model of the

“The Bracebridge Dinner at Yosemite” in the dining room of the Majestic Yosemite Hotel in Yosemite National Park in California where she sang 20 years ago.

World famous photogra-pher Ansel Adams first direct-ed the event, which is still held during the Christmas season.

“We would like to make it a tradition here in the Tooele area as well,” Dale said. “It’s something a little different — it’s fun, it’s spiritual and even a little rowdy.”

The Grantsville Library is located at 52 N. Bowery [email protected]

Auditions for ‘Yuletide Feast’ scheduled for Saturday

COURTESY OF DANIEL PACHECO

Front: Joel Delgadillo and Emily Winters Back: Heidi Robinson, Nancy DeMello, Russ Evans, Barbara Wallace ad Christie Steadman. Cast members of the 2018 Yuletide Feast.

Ballotcontinued from page A1

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Tooele County Deputy Clerk Holly Shields prepares ballots for verification in the MBV1000.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Voters will see a new tool at the November election – the Poll Pad. The machine scans the bar code on an ID or drivers license.

Dividecontinued from page A1

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Deputy Clerk Tinelle Tingey demonstrates the Poll Pad. The Poll Pad will be used by poll workers to check voter registration status.

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TUESDAY August 13, 2019A8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

SportsSPORTS WRAP

Tooele girls soccer vs. KearnsMakenna McCloy scored her first goal of the season and Maddy Lyman picked up the shutout in goal as the Tooele girls soccer team defeated Kearns 1-0 in its home opener Thursday at Tooele High School. The Buffaloes (1-1) played host to Juab in a non-region contest Tuesday. They will travel to Bluffdale to face Summit Academy in another non-region game Thursday afternoon.

Real Salt LakeRSL announced the firing of head coach Mike Petke on Sunday. Petke had been sus-pended by the team for the past two weeks for a postgame altercation with referees fol-lowing a loss to Mexican side Tigres UANL in the Leagues Cup on July 21. Major League Soccer fined Petke $25,000 for the incident, which included the utterance of a homopho-bic slur in Spanish directed at the officials. “After further deliberations and a series of constructive discussions internally and with various members of our community, we have concluded, pursuant to his employment agreement, to immediately terminate Mike Petke’s employment,” RSL said in a statement Sunday. Assistant coach Freddy Juarez will be the interim head coach through the end of the 2019 season, where Real Salt Lake (11-9-4) currently sits sixth in the Western Conference, tied with the fifth-place LA Galaxy with 37 points. RSL is a point ahead of seventh-place FC Dallas and three points ahead of eighth-place Portland, with the top seven teams advancing to the postseason.

Utah Royals FCURFC picked up a much-needed 3-1 win over Reign FC on Sunday at Cheney Stadium in Tacoma, Washington, moving the Royals within two points of Reign FC for the fourth and final postseason berth in the National Women’s Soccer League. Katie Stengel scored in the third minute for Utah (7-6-3, 24 points), while Lo’eau LaBonta broke a 1-1 tie with her goal in the 59th minute and Amy Rodriguez added an insurance goal in the 67th. The Royals will face the Orlando Pride on Saturday in Orlando, Florida. Their next home game is Sept. 6 against Portland Thorns FC at Rio Tinto Stadium in Sandy.

Notable HS girls soccer scores ThursdayTooele 1, Kearns 0Jordan 2, Stansbury 1Bear River 8, Providence Hall 0Canyon View 5, Payson 0Cedar 10, Cottonwood 0Clearfield 1, Ben Lomond 0Farmington 3, Ridgeline 2, OTLogan 1, Fremont 0Ogden 5, Mountain Crest 0Salem Hills 3, Orem 2, OTSky View 2, Box Elder 1Carbon 2, Union 1Granger 2, Summit Academy 0North Sanpete 4, Millard 1Richfield 4, Delta 3Rowland Hall 0, Manti 0, 2OT FridayCedar Valley 4, Spanish Fork 0Desert Hills 1, Orem 0Desert Hills 3, Salem Hills 1Green Canyon 3, Dixie 0Judge Memorial 4, Juan Diego 0Provo 1, Uintah 0Skyridge 4, Orem 1Juab 3, Emery 1Northridge 2, Morgan 1Parowan 1, North Sanpete 0 SaturdayLehi 5, Uintah 2Ridgeline 6, Wasatch 0Sky View 6, Dixie 1Skyridge 3, Salem Hills 0

Schedule Wednesday’s gameStansbury girls tennis at Hunter, 3 p.m. Thursday’s gamesTooele cross country at Highland (Sugar House Park)Tooele girls tennis at Cache Valley TournamentGrantsville girls soccer at Cyprus, 3:30 p.m.Tooele girls soccer at Summit Academy, 3:30 p.m.

Your Local News SourceTRANSCRIPT

BULLETINTOOELE

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Stansbury’s Chloee Corbett (7) works her way around Jordan’s Elsie Tafuna during Thursday’s non-region girls soccer match at Stansbury High School. Jordan won the match 2-1 in Stansbury’s first home game of the season.

DARREN VAUGHANSPORTS EDITOR

The Stansbury girls soccer team was down in its home opener against Class 6A Jordan on Thursday afternoon, but the Stallions weren’t out of it.

And while their rally ulti-mately came up one goal short in a 2-1 loss to the visiting Beetdiggers, there was plenty for the Stallions (0-1-1) to be happy about after the final whistle sounded.

“We were just right there,” Stansbury coach Spencer Call

said. “They were all comment-ing after the game that last year, they would have given up and lost by three or four or five (goals). They were pretty proud of themselves that they hung in there, gave them a game and got back (in it).”

Despite a relatively strong start, the Stallions found them-selves behind 1-0 in the 23rd minute when a quick turnover near the right post allowed

Jordan’s Kailey Brecke to slip a quick shot past Stansbury goalkeeper Ainsley Thurber. Stansbury had several chances to tie the game as the first half progressed, including a pair of free kicks by Rylie Klenk and a point-blank shot by Reagan Didericksen that was turned aside.

However, it all went awry in the final moments of the half as Elsie Tafuna squeaked a shot past Thurber in stoppage time

Stallions’ late rally falls short against ’Diggers

SHS GIRLS SOCCER

SEE SOCCER PAGE A9 ➤

CHARLIE ROBERTSCORRESPONDENT

With the Thursday dead-line rapidly approaching for the annual Stansbury Days Triathlon, a handful of open-ings remain available for the popular local event.

“We cap the total at 125 for our spring triathlon. Today we still have about 15 spots open,” director Hillary Luke said.

She emphasized that reg-istration closes Thursday and same-day registrations are not available.

Cost is $30 for Tooele County residents and $40 for non-county athletes. Additional details and registration is available at stansburydaystri.com.

This year’s event is dedicat-ed in honor of Mike Rueckert, a longtime Stansbury Park resi-dent. He lost his life on New Year’s Eve in an unfortunate skiing accident.

“Mike was longtime par-ticipant in our triathlon and his contagious smile will be forever missed,” Luke said. “He will be missed by all of us.”

The spring triathlon features a 500-meter swim in Stansbury Lake, a 12-mile bike ride through Stansbury and Erda

and a 3.1-mile out-and-back run.

“It’s an ideal first-time event for those who have considered triathlon competition and relays are also available,” Luke said.

A triathlon for teenaged youths has been added to this year’s slate. It consists of a 150-meter swim, six-mile bike leg, and a 2.2-mile run.

The increasingly popular kids triathlon is held Friday for youth between the ages of 5-12. This includes a 50-yard

swim in the Stansbury pool, 3.2-mile bike ride, and a 1-mile run.

Luke says committee mem-bers extend special apprecia-tion to sponsors Tooele Valley Cycle, Hinton Family Dental, Mountain West Medical Center, Urgent Care at Stansbury Springs, The Dance Center, and Stu’s Garage Doors.

“Because of these local busi-nesses’ generosity we are able to hold a quality event at an extremely low entry fee,” Luke said.

Handful of spots open for Stansbury Triathlon

SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO

Judy Desmond grabs her bicycle during a transition at the Stansbury Days Triathlon in August 2018. Registration for this year’s race is open through Thursday, with the race itself scheduled for Saturday.

IT’S TIME FOR TENNIS

Tooele’s Tess Flake

(above left) and Camilla

Pankratz give each other

some encour-agement dur-ing their third

doubles match against Juab

on Monday at Tooele High

School. Grace Black (right) hits

a return dur-ing her second doubles match

on Monday.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/ TTB PHOTOS

DARREN VAUGHANSPORTS EDITOR

It has been a tough past couple seasons for the Tooele football team.

Since posting a 24-10 record over a three-season span that included a trip to the state semifinals and another trip to the quarterfinals from 2014-16, the Buffaloes are just 8-14 and they haven’t gotten out of the first round of the state playoffs. Last year, Tooele went 3-8 and was swept by county rivals Grantsville and Stansbury, add-ing further insult to injury.

However, new coach Andru Jones isn’t just bringing a new spread offense and a 4-3 defense to town. There’s a renewed sense of optimism for the boys in purple, along with adetermi-nation to find their way back to the top of the Tooele County heap.

“They’re blue-collar and they work hard,” Jones said. “They’re great kids. It’s hard not to love them because they work so hard and they do everything we’ve asked. They have more of a chip on their shoulder, which I’m excited for. They want to do some special things and they have some lofty goals.”

Offensively, senior quarter-

back Kulani Iongi has plenty of weapons around him as he leads the Buffs’ transition from the Wing-T to the spread. In the backfield, he’ll have fellow senior Nukuluve Helu, who has verbally committed to play at Brigham Young University after a stellar junior season that saw him rush for 941 yards and 16 touchdowns on just 99 attempts. Gavin Ware will also be a threat in the open field as a receiver and runner, while Joseph Douglas moves from backup quarterback to tight end to give Iongi another big target.

“Our run game looks really good, and our pass game is coming along,” said Iongi, who threw for 1,494 yards and eight

touchdowns as a junior. “Last year, I struggled a little bit toward the end of the season, but I feel like now that (Jones) is loosening up the bands on me and what I can do with the offense, I can attack the defense a little more effectively.

I feel like last year, we were a little bit down on ourselves throughout the whole season, and there was a lot of stuff that people didn’t know was going on. I feel like this year, you’ll see us a little more fired up and we’ll be ready to go when the game starts.”

Douglas said the passing game will be a key as the Buffs

Buffaloes look to bounce backNew-look Tooele hopes to regain local bragging rights

THS FOOTBALL

Tooele assis-tant coach Aaron Shepard (left) directs the Buffaloes’ scout-team offense during Wednesday’s practice at Tooele High School. The Buffaloes will open their first season under coach Andru Jones on Friday at Green Canyon. Kameron Rolle (below) practices his tackling tech-nique during a drill Wednesday. Rolle figures to be a key part of the Buffaloes’ defense this season.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/ TTB PHOTOS

SEE BUFFS PAGE A9 ➤

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TUESDAY August 13, 2019 A9TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

DARREN VAUGHANSPORTS EDITOR

The Stansbury boys golf team finished second in Thursday’s Region 10 match at Dinaland Golf Course in Vernal, while Tooele was fourth in a tourna-ment where the four teams were separated by just 26 strokes.

Stansbury finished with a team score of 314, 10 strokes off Cedar Valley’s pace. Peyton Thevenot led the Stallions with an 18-hole score of 73, the third-best individual score of the day behind Uintah’s Kamon Anderson (69) and Cedar Valley’s Caden Dunn (71). Braydon Griffith shot 74 for the Stallions, while Hunter Luke tied for 11th overall with an 82 and Dan Estes was 16th with an 85. Other competitors for Stansbury included Cole Clawson (tied for 17th, 86), Ty Taylor (27th, 98), Drew Knudsen (tied for 28th, 99) and Tayson Alder (tied for 28th, 99).

Tooele posted a team score of 330, 10 strokes behind host school Uintah’s third-place effort. Luke Begnaud finished in a tie for fifth place with a score of 76 to lead the Buffaloes. Cache Holmes tied for 11th place with an 82, with Ashton Morrill 14th (83) and Caleb Buell tied for 20th (89). Dallin Callister (tied for 22nd, 90), Jesse Sayers (tied for 25th, 95), AJ Griffith (30th, 100) and Landon Buell (32nd, 110) rounded out Tooele’s effort.

The teams took part in a pair of region matches Monday and Tuesday in Ogden. Results were not available at press time. After a break, they will return to action Aug. 29 at Oquirrh Hills Golf Course in Tooele. [email protected]

Stallions finish second in Vernal

SHS GOLF

THS GOLF

DARREN VAUGHANSPORTS EDITOR

Tooele-based mixed mar-tial arts Andrew “Boomer” Arellano continues to impress each time he steps in the octa-gon.

On Friday at the Union Event Center in Salt Lake City, Arellano defeated reigning champion Michael Eastwood by submission (triangle) in the third round of their fly-weight amateur champion-ship bout at Steelfist Fight Night’s “Victorious” card. It was Arellano’s fourth victory in as many amateur fights, and it marked the second time he’s won a championship belt this year — he won the Fierce

Fighting Championship’s amateur flyweight champion-

ship March 2 in Salt Lake City when he beat Brandon Rease

by technical knockout.Arellano’s Tooele Martial

Arts Academy teammate, for-mer Stansbury High softball player Jocelyn Kaufman, was also part of Friday’s event in Salt Lake City. However, Kaufman suffered the second defeat of her amateur career, losing by unanimous decision to Natalya Speece. Kaufman won Mountain Force MMA’s women’s flyweight amateur championship March 30 in Logan by defeating Kaycee Pearce by TKO.

More information on Friday night’s fights will be published in a future edition of the Transcript [email protected]

Arellano ‘Victorious’ in latest bout

Andrew “Boomer” Arellano Jocelyn Kaufman

after a free kick. The Stallions’ sophomore goalkeeper very nearly made the save, but the ball trickled just over the goal line.

Stansbury came out deter-mined to make a game of it in the second half, though Jordan (1-0) didn’t make things easy. Kirsten Oldham sent a shot over the crossbar in the 43rd minute for the Beetdiggers, and team-mate Hannah Babinski rang one directly off the bar one pointe later. Thurber also made a div-ing stop on Brecke in the 46th minute.

The Stallions were finally rewarded in the 66th minute on a picture-perfect shot from senior Gracey Hinton. Hinton and Danica Silvestri worked a give-and-go along the right side, and Hinton blasted a shot that found its way past Jordan goal-keeper Camryn Miller and into the top left corner of the net.

“A sense of urgency and just connecting more passes — that’s kind of what I thought it was,”

Call said of the difference in the Stallions’ second-half effort. “I think they were a little intimi-dated because they’re a big 6A school and they’ve got a lot of good players, but I think we showed that we’re just as good or maybe a hair behind them.”

Nine minutes later, Silvestri nearly tied the game, only to have her shot be turned away by Miller’s diving stop. Miller also smothered a free-kick attempt by Silvestri in the 79th minute to preserve the Beetdiggers’ vic-tory.

“Probably the most encour-aging thing right now is that there’s a a sense of unity amongst them,” Call said. “They all really like each other. There’s a really good defensive mental-ity, and the offense is very, very close to scoring, breaking out of their shell and getting a lot of goals in the back of the net.”

Stansbury continued its pre-season schedule Tuesday after-noon in Garland against Bear River. The Stallions will return home to face Taylorsville on Friday [email protected]

Soccer continued from page A8

try to climb the ladder in a wide-open Region 10 race.

“The thing is, there are really tight friendships on this team, which equals a lot of chemistry with each other,” he said. “We’ve got size, we’ve got height — we’ve got everything we can use here. We’ve got so much talent out here, and with the strength of Kulani’s arm and the hands of all our receiv-ers out here, we’ve got a lot of talent when it comes to the air.”

Jared Jackson is Tooele’s lone returner along the offen-sive line. He will be joined up front by Cole Murray, Bridger Chaplin and Adrien Lovato, among others. Key skill play-ers include wide receivers Joseph Wilkins and Josh Prescott, along with running backs Anthony Cole and Tabor Shepard.

Jones noted that the Buffaloes had a lot of success in their 7-on-7 camps during the summer, further boosting his confidence that Tooele can achieve a number of the goals it has set for itself.

“At Weber State, we went to the Elite Eight and we went triple-overtime with Bingham,” he said. “We beat Skyridge. We beat Wasatch. People are starting to notice this team has some talent and they’re not what they used to be.

“We want to change the atmosphere in this county. They want to play for that ‘T.’

That’s what they’re playing for. We make a big thing about tak-ing pride in that stuff. You’re going to see a little bit more ‘oomph,’ because it’s Tooele County, Tooele High School and Tooele football. They want to play for those things.”

While the Buffs may be young and learning the ropes of a new offense and a new defense, one thing that can’t be questioned is their work ethic, Jones added.

“The thing that we can’t teach is their passion and their drive, and they have it,” he said. “They want to work hard for us and they want to do things for us. They’re eager. When you talk to our boys, they’re eager to get going.”

Defensively, Ware is one of the top returning players, hav-ing ranked sixth on the team in tackles as a safety in 2018. Helu starts at linebacker, while

Wilkins returns at defensive back and Finefeuiaki Maumau is back on the defensive line. Helu’s younger brother, fresh-man Mateaki Helu, will look to make an impact in the sec-ondary. Prescott and Kameron Rolle will contribute at corner back, with Lovato and Ty Sutherland at linebacker and Douglas, Dominique Ascraft, Devin Murphy and Paea Tone on the defensive line.

“They’ve gotten a fire under-neath them,” Jones said. “They haven’t done so well in the past couple seasons, and they need that encouragement to help lift them up more. I think they’re going to achieve a lot of their goals — individual and team goals — because of the way they work and the way they care for each other, and the way we as a staff care for them. I think the sky’s the limit.”

Ware is looking forward to

seeing what the Buffs can do.“I’ve got no doubt that we

could take a little run in the playoffs, and of course take our region and our county back,” Ware said. “I just think there’s a lot more swag to it, and I defi-nitely think there’s a chip on our shoulder.

“These coaches care about each and every one of us, and (Jones) believes that any one of us can play in that starting 11. There’s a lot more confidence going into each and every player.”

Jones said fans can expect to see the culture change that has taken place on the practice field translate to the game field on Friday nights this fall.

“I think you’re going to see us play with a lot more pride,” Jones said. “They’re prideful for that ‘T,’ they’re prideful for this community and they’re prideful to wear that purple of our school. They play hard and they’re more physical. We want to bring that old-school mentality back to this program — what Tooele was known for for so many years.”

Tooele’s season opener is Friday in North Logan against Green Canyon. The home open-er is Aug. 23 against county rival Grantsville, followed by a game against Minico (Idaho) on Aug. 30 in Pocatello, Idaho. The Region 10 opener is sched-uled for Sept. 6 at Ben Lomond, with a trip to Stansbury on Sept. 13 and the Buffs’ first region home game Sept. 20 against [email protected]

Buffs continued from page A8

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

From left, Tooele seniors Kulani Iongi, Joseph Douglas and Gavin Ware hope to lead the Buffaloes to a strong season in 2019.

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Hometown

Liam England completes 50 Yard Challenge and learns that helping citizens who can’t mow their lawns has its own rewards

STORY DIANE HATCH | PHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE

A year ago, Liam England, 11, put his family lawn mower in the back of

the car and his mother drove him to his grandmother’s house where he mowed the lawn.

“She has a normal, just pusher mower that’s really hard,” Liam said. “So we just folded the lawn mower up and put it in the car. Then we drove over there.”

Now there were only 49 lawns left for Liam to mow to complete Rodney Smith Jr.’s 50 Yard Challenge. Liam’s father inspired him to join.

“My dad just said, ‘Hey, there’s this 50 Yard Challenge. Do you want to do it?’” Liam said. “I just went, ‘Sure.’”

Smith, a Bermudan attend-ing college in Alabama, felt God called him to mow lawns for free for the elderly, single moms, the disabled, and vet-erans when he saw an elderly man struggling to mow his lawn and he stopped and helped in 2015, according to CNN. Famously, he traveled to every state mowing lawns.

Then Smith created the 50 Yard Challenge to get young people involved in their com-munities because he couldn’t mow all of the lawns.

Liam England (front) with his sbib-lings Peyton and Mishay England have all taken the 50 Yard Challenge.

SEE SERVICE PAGE B8 �

50 Yards of Service

It’s a way to serve people. It’s something that does not seem like it’s that huge. But for people that it’s diffi cult to mow their lawn, it is a big thing for them.

–Mishay England

"

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TUESDAY August 13, 2019B2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

DEAR PAW’S CORNER: This morning, I was walk-ing into the drugstore when I heard a small dog frantically barking from a nearby car. I looked in the window and saw a toy poodle rushing back and forth along the back seat, put-ting her paws on the closed windows and barking at every-one passing by. The car was not running, so no air condi-tioning, though it was parked in a shady spot. I rushed inside

the store and called for the manager, who contacted the police.

They immediately opened the car and rescued the little dog, who was panting heavily. Please let your readers know that leaving your pet inside a locked car, even in the shade, can be a death sentence! — Relieved Pet Mom in Maine

DEAR RELIEVED: I’m glad this story had a happy ending! Folks, even on a pleasant day with temperatures in the mid-70s, the interior of a car can heat up to life-threatening lev-els of more than 100 F. That’s even on a cloudy day, or when parked in a shady spot.

Even if you leave your pet inside a locked, running car with the air conditioning on, that’s still not acceptable. Your

pet will be very anxious with-out you present, and anything might happen while you’re away.

If you want to take your pet with you, make sure the places you go will welcome pets inside. (Your pet should be well-trained and responsive to your commands, and not aggressive to other dogs.) Or, have a friend come along and sit in the running car with your dog or walk them in a nearby grassy area or park while you shop.

Otherwise, leave pets at home. The risk is not worth it.

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

© 2019 King Features Synd., Inc.

1. GEOGRAPHY: Which U.S. state has the most miles of rivers?

2. LITERATURE: Who was the author of “The Hundred and One Dalmatians”?

3. ANATOMY: What is the common term for the axilla?

4. LANGUAGE: What is the international radio code word for the letter “P”?

5. MUSIC: How many sym-phonies did Beethoven compose?

6. SPORTS: How many play-ers are on a cricket team?

7. COMICS: Which comic strip features characters named Jeremy, Hector and Sara?

8. TELEVISION: What is the color of Mr. Spock’s blood on the “Star Trek” series?

9. MEASUREMENTS: What is a ligne and what does it measure?

10. FOOD & DRINK: What is the name of a tea named after a 1830s British prime minister?

➤ On Aug. 30, 1776, Gen. George Washington rejects British Gen. William Howe's second letter of reconciliation. Howe had failed to use Washington's title of "general" when addressing the letter.

➤ On Sept. 1, 1864, renowned Confederate spy Rose O'Neal Greenhow drowns off the North Carolina coast when her craft capsizes while fleeing a Union gunboat. Greenhow was carrying Confederate dispatches and $2,000 in gold sewn into her underclothes. The weight of the gold pulled her under.

➤ On Aug. 28, 1917, 10 women suffragists are arrested as they picket the White House to demand that President Woodrow Wilson support a Constitutional amendment guaranteeing women the right to vote. After the jailed women went on a hunger strike and had to be force fed for months, Wilson finally agreed to a suffrage amendment.

➤ On Aug. 26, 1939, the first televised Major League baseball game is broadcast. Announcer Red Barber called the game between the Cincinnati Reds and the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field in New York. The video coverage was somewhat crude. There were only two stationary camera angles.

➤ On Aug. 31, 1955, William Cobb of General Motors demonstrates his 15-inch-long "Sunmobile," the world's first solar-powered automobile, at an auto show in Chicago.

➤ On Aug. 27, 1967, Brian Epstein, manager of the Beatles, is found dead of an accidental drug overdose in his Sussex, England, home. In 1962, Epstein was hired in a deal that gave him 25 percent of the band's gross earnings for five years.

➤ On Aug. 29, 2004, Brazilian distance runner Vanderlei de Lima is attacked and dragged off the course by a spectator while running the marathon in the Summer Olympics. The spectator was a defrocked Irish priest dressed in orange and green. De Lima, who held a 30-second lead when he was attacked, finished in third place.

© 2019 King Features Synd.

The hisTory Channel

Momentsin Time

by FifiRodriguez

Mega Maze

ALL PUZZLE ANSWERS BELOW

ANSWERS

1. Nebraska 2. Dodie Smith 3. Armpit4. Papa5. Nine6. 117. “Zits”

8. Green9. A French unit of

length used to size watches, buttons and hats

10. Earl Grey© 2019 King Features Synd., Inc.

Trivia Test Answers

Q: When does the new Patricia Heaton sitcom start? I loved her on “Everybody Loves Raymond” and “The Middle.” I’m glad she’s not interested in retiring anytime soon. — J.K.

A: “Carol’s Second Act” premieres Thursday, Sept. 26, on CBS and stars Heaton as a retired teacher who decides to become a doctor in the next stage of her life. The sitcom also stars Kyle MacLachlan (“Twin Peaks”) as an estab-lished physician.

Heaton is in no hurry to retire. She joked at a recent press conference: “My perfect scenario, as I see death getting near, is that I’d die on a sound stage. That’s how I want to go

— just as long as I’ve had full hair and make-up.”

• • •Q: Are they going to make a

movie about the college brib-ery scandal, where the actress-es paid a bunch of money to get their kids into prestigious universities? — E.P.

A: It was only a matter of time before a script would be written about the col-lege admissions scandal, and now it’s finally happening. The Lifetime channel just announced that production has begun on the story, but don’t expect it to feature the names Lori Loughlin and Felicity Huffman specifically.

For those who don’t know about the case, Loughlin (“Full House”) and Huffman (“Desperate Housewives”) were among 50 people indict-ed by federal authorities. The actresses were accused of pay-ing a “fixer” to help beef up their children’s college applica-tions with false information and also by rigging their SAT

exams. An estimated $25 mil-lion in bribes were paid in all. At this time, no air date has been announced.

• • •Q: I love watching

the game show “Cash Cab,” where passen-gers in New York City get into what they think is a regular yel-low taxi cab only to find out they’re contes-tants on a game show. My granddaughter told me that the driver-host also is an actor. Is this true? — N.W.

A: Yes, Ben Bailey, who began hosting “Cash Cab” in 2005, began as a stand-up comedian and actor. His credits are almost exclusively one-time guest-starring roles, including “Unforgettable,” a mys-tery-drama that starred Poppy Montgomery and was canceled back

in 2016. He also played himself on an episode of “30 Rock.”

The original “Cash Cab”

aired in the U.K., and the American version ran from 2005 to 2012 on the Discovery

Channel. It came back in 2017 and 2018 with the same host. You’ll have to change the channel to see future episodes though. Bravo announced it will air all new episodes this fall, with more pop-culture questions and an all new taxi cab. Participants will still get a couple of chances for extra help if they get stuck on a question. They can ask a bystand-er or reach out through social media, but they’ll have to rely on their own intelligence on most of the questions.

Send me your questions at [email protected]!

© 2019 King Features Synd.Patricia Heaton

A quick look online for a collectible old fan will show electric fans

made since the late 1800s. But some collectors want even older fans, the handheld fold-ing fans that were being made by the 1700s. These fans were more than a fashion accessory — they were important indi-cators of the user’s status and good taste. There was even a “language of love” using the fan that let a lady flirt, ask men to come by to chat, or even hit an irritating person.

Folding fans were made with sticks of bone, ivory, bamboo, wood, tortoiseshell, mother-of-pearl, lacquer, metal or more recently, plas-tic. They held a decorated cover of silk, paper, leather or canvas. Some had added jewels and artist-drawn oil or watercolor paintings. A talent-ed fan painter was as impor-tant as an artist who created portraits or landscapes.

Collectors in the 1950s searched for period fans and often mounted them in half-circle frames. Expensive fans of the past are hard to find in good condition. This painted paper fan with carved gilt sticks decorated with mother-of-pearl was offered for sale at a Neal auction.

• • •Q: My mother has my

grandparents’ desk. It is knee-hole style, with a curvy front, two drawers on each side and a drawer in the middle.

The label on the back reads “Cherry and Maple/Atlas Furniture Co., Jamestown, New York.” What is it worth?

A: Atlas Furniture Co. was formed in 1883 as the Swedish Furniture Co. by Swedish immi-grants Lawrence Erickson and Gustave Holmberg in Jamestown. The name was changed to Atlas in 1871. Atlas advertised as “Manufacturers of Bedroom Furniture,” making “better” grades of bedroom furniture, including dressers, chiffoniers and toilet tables from walnut, mahogany and other woods. Atlas closed in 1941. Your desk would sell for $50 to $100.

• • •Q: I found 10 unused

World War I postcards. The title of one of the postcards is “Les Americains au Camp d’Auvours.” I’ve spent hours online and can’t find anything similar. Are they worth any-thing?

A: A military camp has been located at Champagne, France, since the 1870s. Allied troops used the camp as a rear base during World War I. A series of postcards was made picturing American troops at the camp and most sell online for under $5. To find out more, go to a post-card show or antiques show and talk to a postcard dealer.

© 2019 King Features Synd., Inc.

Just how hot can a hot car get?

Something On Your Mind?

Write a Letter to the Editor!

Tooele Transcript BulletinP.O. Box 390

Tooele, UT 84074

[email protected]

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TUESDAY August 13, 2019 B3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

(StatePoint) A new school year is a clean slate. How are you going to make your mark?

To help students every-where gear up for a successful school year, celebrated actor, author, humanitarian and G2 Overachiever, Priyanka Chopra Jonas is sharing tips for making more happen.

Tip 1: Set specific goals: Writing down goals and aspira-tions can get you started on the right note. In a recent survey conducted by Pilot Pen, more than 94 percent of people stated that writing down goals makes you more likely to achieve them, whether that means getting straight As, making your favorite sports team, or making a differ-ence in your community.

Tip 2: Get involved: Find

something that you are passion-ate about this school year, wheth-er that means joining an existing club or taking on a totally new project. You can get inspired by Ian McKenna, winner of the 2018 G2 Overachievers Student

Grant, which recognizes young scholars (age 13-19, in middle or high school) who are making a real difference in others’ lives in and outside of the classroom. A native of Austin, Texas, 14-year-old McKenna was inspired to

help feed his hungry classmates during winter break and founded Ian’s Giving Garden, a series of community gardens that donates 100 percent of their crops to hun-gry families. To-date, McKenna’s charity has helped feed over 700 families by growing and donating an estimated 18,300 pounds of fresh produce.

McKenna’s inspiring story was selected by Chopra Jonas from a pool of highly qualified nomi-nees. Together with Pilot, she’ll award McKenna and his school a combined $15,000 grant. He plans to use his $12,500 por-tion for college tuition, to gain the skills needed to make an even greater impact on social issues like hunger. The remain-ing $2,500 will go to his school to help continue fostering over-

achievement among its students.Do you know someone

going above and beyond their daily responsibilities to bet-ter their community? Whether they’re a student or adult, visit G2Overachievers.com to learn more and submit a handwritten nomination.

Tip 3: Be prepared: Overachievers of all ages know that you have to have the right tools on-hand so that you’re always prepared when inspira-tion strikes. Whether you’re taking notes in class, outlining a science experiment or planning a fundraiser for an afterschool club, the right pen in your hand can make all the difference. A preferred pen of overachievers, the G2 gel ink pen by Pilot is smooth-writing, long-lasting and

the number one selling pen in America. Its smaller counterpart, the G2 Mini, offers the same smooth-writing ink and comfort-able grip of full-sized G2s in 10 great color options, and funds the G2 Overachievers Student Grant.

Tip 4: Try something new: Make this the year you step out-side your comfort zone and try something totally new to you. Audition for the school play. Join or start a new club. You never know where a hidden talent lies and there’s only one way to find out.

When taking on new chal-lenges this school year, no matter your goals, remember that with smart planning, perseverance and the best tools, you too can be an overachiever.

Fudging the truth to adopt animal is wrong

A married couple we’re calling John and Grace recently moved with

their 8- and 10-year-old chil-dren to a new town in a new state. While eventually the kids were somewhat excited about the move, it was still challeng-ing to leave good friends and their old neighborhood behind.

Joining the family in being uprooted were the family’s three adult cats. But that num-ber might soon grow because John and Grace had promised their children that once they had settled in their new town they could pay the local animal shelter a visit to find a new cat to adopt.

The two children did not forget the promise of a new cat once they were all settled in. John and Grace did some online research, saw that there were many cats available for adoption and called the shelter to schedule a visit with the cats.

While at the shelter, John

and Grace met with a represen-tative who asked them to fill out an adoption form, which laid out all the expenses for neutering and assorted shots and such. When John got to the question about how many pets the family already owned, before answering he asked the representative if the shelter placed limits on how many cats a family could adopt.

The representative explained that the county had a law that a residence or household could have no more than three adult pets of any type. John looked at Grace, wrote a number next to the answer, showed it to Grace, and after she nodded, he turned the form in. To avoid appearing to exceed the limit

and to keep his commitment to his kids, John wrote that the family had two adult cats at home rather than three.

“We’re good with cats,” John wrote. “And I didn’t want to disappoint my children.” John is willing to risk being found out by the county and deal with whatever fine ensues.

But now John is having sec-ond thoughts. Was it wrong to fudge a bit on the truth to be able to provide a good home for an abandoned cat? Or, “Should I let the shelter know the truth?”

While John and Grace’s children will be disappointed if they can’t adopt a new cat, the right thing is for John to tell the truth. Beyond break-ing the law in an effort to get something he wants for his family, lying to get what he wants could send the message to his children that doing so is acceptable behavior. In this case, it’s not.

It might be simple to justify

that the end of providing an abandoned animal a good home justifies the means, but John’s actions essentially come down to doing what he had to do to get what he wants for himself and his family. Breaking county ordinances hardly seems a good way to break into a new hometown.

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

© 2019 Jeffrey L. Seglin. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

MONDAY’S WARM COCOA

Problems with impossible angles can change with a new viewIt was a morning made for

climbing up the Stansbury Mountains with the sun.

The sky was a bright blue. Overnight rain had cooled the air, as well as arrested the endless dust normally thrown up from tires traveling on dry, mountainous dirt roads. So Kilee Johnson and I were excit-ed to get our wheels in motion.

“Let’s go to that place we’ve never been before,” she said as we drove up the road toward North Willow Canyon.

Her suggestion heightened our anticipation and I could feel excitement in my chest as we drove along in the side-by-side ATV. Wind passed over the doors of the ATV and across us, and it wasn’t long before

we were well rewarded by her choice.

The road turned from dirt into a trail of loose rock, marked by route signs. I flipped the switch over to four-wheel-drive and shifted the transmission to low.

“Can we go up that?” Kilee asked as we looked at a trou-bling part of the trail.

It had been washed out and transformed into a deep crevasse, punctuated by large

boulders. And it all came together at seemingly impos-sible angles. I could feel my breath catch before I answered her.

“I don’t know!” I said. “I’ve never been over terrain like that before.”

“Oh! That makes me feel really confident about it!” Kilee said with a slight quiver in her voice.

Before I spent too much time thinking about it, my right foot slowly pushed the accelerator petal down in a measured, deliberate manner. We began to crawl forward and up.

“Are we going to roll over doing this?” Kilee called out above the engine noise.

I didn’t answer. I simply kept the machine on a steady ascent right through the most chal-lenging aspect.

“Can you believe what this machine can do?” I said while briefly looking at Kilee.

“It’s amazing!” she said with her eyes looking at the rocks just ahead.

The rest of our climb up the boulder-strewn trail was not as thrilling in the same way. It was beautiful though! When we made it to the end of the trail at the Deseret Peak Wilderness Area boundary, we looked at each other and smiled. We shared a feeling of accomplishment, having done something fun and worthwhile together. Then we started to

make our way back down.While en route, I was a little

worried about the seemingly impossible angles we both knew were not far away.

“You get to sit on the scary side this time,” I said as we neared that part of the trail.

Kilee just looked over at me and said wryly, “Oh. Thanks!”

When we got to the spot, I saw it from a different angle. It wasn’t nearly as frightening from this new vantage point and we drive right through it with ease.

“You know, when you look at a problem you’re facing from different angles, it reveals hidden opportunity,” I said afterward.

“That’s exactly right!” Kilee

said as we continued our descent.

“It was a morning made for climbing up the Stansbury Mountains with the sun!” I said to myself as we pulled back onto the blacktopped road to finish our little adventure.

We were both excited to rediscover that facing prob-lems with impossible angles while traveling on the road of life, can be dealt with more successfully by taking the time to change one’s view and approach.

It reveals once hidden opportunity.

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

Lynn Butterfi eldGUEST COLUMNIST

Lynn Butterfi eld

Jeffrey L. SeglinGUEST COLUMNIST

Jeffrey L. Seglin

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BOOKWORM

Carrying the Fire50th Anniversary Edition

Reissued with a new preface by the author on the fiftieth anniversary of the Apollo 11 journey to the moon

The years that have passed since Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin,

and Michael Collins piloted the Apollo 11 spacecraft to the moon in July 1969 have done nothing to alter the fundamen-tal wonder of the event: man reaching the moon remains one of the great events—tech-nical and spiritual—of our lifetime.

In Carrying the Fire, Collins conveys, in a very personal way, the drama, beauty, and humor of that adventure. He also traces his development from his first flight experi-ences in the air force, through his days as a test pilot, to his Apollo 11 space walk, present-ing an evocative picture of the joys of flight as well as a new

perspective on time, light, and movement from someone who has seen the fragile earth from the other side of the moon.

Carrying the Fire: 50th Anniversary Edition

by Michael CollinsFarrar, Straus and Giroux

How to take on the new school year like the ultimate overachiever

Ian McKenna, Pilot Pen 2018 G2 Overachievers Student Grant Winner.

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TREE TRIMMING andstump removal. CallKolleen at TooeleValley Stump Grind-ing 435-849-6768.

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

Miscellaneous

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

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Miscellaneous

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Get DIRECTV! ONLY$35/month ! 155Channels & 1000s ofShows/Movies OnDemand (w/SELECTAll Included Pack-age.) PLUS Streamon Up to FIVEScreens Simultane-ously at No Addt?lCost. Call DIRECTV1-833-599-6474

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

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

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

Furniture & Appliances

FOR SALE 3x6ft solidwood desk with sideshelves: $300 OBO.Wooden credenza:$200 OBO. ContactJim 435-833-9524.

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

WASHER AND dryer,good condition, forsale. Make best offer.435-841-3054.

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

Furniture & Appliances

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Garage, Yard Sales

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

Pets

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Livestock

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

Sporting Goods

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

YOTTY DISOLVINGSinkers. Get your baitwhere the fish are.Environmentally safe,no harmful chemicals.C a l l L a r r y435-850-2990 or

[email protected].

Personals

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

Help Wanted

CLOTHESLINE EX-PRESS now hiringpart time counterhelp. Hours are ap-proximately10am-4pm, we’ l ltrain. Apply in personat 1180 N 134 W.

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

Help Wanted

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

L I C E N S E D C D LDRIVERS: GTMBuilders is looking forlicensed CDL Drivers!$18/hr starting pay.Class A CDL re-quired. Home nightly,local driving, greatbenef i ts . Pleaseemail resumes to [email protected]. Any questionsplease contact Travisat 435-840-2849.Start your career to-day with GTM Build-ers!

Business Opportunities

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

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

Wanted

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

QUIET, CLEAN 60+lady seeking Tooelerental . Non-smoker$400-550/mo. Includeutilities, wifi, privatebath, and entrance.385-267-8655.

Autos

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Autos

RW AUTO Sales-Commuter Car Deals!336 N Main inTooele! 10 Units$9,995 or less! Vehi-cle Locator Programfor any make ormodel! Dlr. #278A.

We only sell clean title,clean Carfax units. Allvehicles come withan engine and trans-mission warranty.visit www.mycom-mutercar.com or call801-842-1411.

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

Apartments for Rent

1BDRM BASEMENTAPT. $650/mo $500deposit, utilities in-cluded except electri-cal. No smoking, nop e t s . C a l l435-830-3076.

Homes for Rent

FOR RENT newly re-modeled one bdrmcottage 175 S WIL-L O W S T R E E T ,#203, 1 Bdrm, 1 bath, $695+ utilities, waterpaid, no pets. Avail-able Lana Mckean,Mckean properties,Apps required.801-518-8670.

Homes

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

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

Water Shares

ONE SHARE Settle-ment Canyon irriga-tion water $3500O B O c a l l435-830-2891.

Buildings

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

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

Public Notices Meetings

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

AGENDA NOTICE is herebygiven that the Stans-bury Service AgencyBoard of Trustees willhold a Regular Meet-ing on Wednesday,August 14, 2019, at7:00 pm, at the Stans-bury Park Clubhouse,#1 Country Club Drive,Stansbury Park, Utah84074.1. Call to Order2. Review and AdoptMinutes, June 26,2019 Regular Meeting3. Review and AdoptMinutes, July 15, 2019Special Session4. Public Comment5. Pavilion Pricing6. Micah Peters - SSAProperty7. Dennis Walker -Greenbelt Property8. Lake ReportRECESSWORK SESSION1. General Manager'sReport2. Board Members'Reports & Requests3. CorrespondenceReceived4. Financials & Bills5. Possible ClosedMeeting6. Adjourn(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin August 13, 2019)

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is Hereby Giventhat the Tooele CityCouncil will meet in aWork Session, onWednesday, August14, 2019 at the hour of5:00 p.m. The Meet-ing will be Held at theTooele City Hall LargeConference Room, lo-cated at 90 North MainStreet, Tooele, Utah.1. Open City CouncilMeeting2. Roll Call3. Discussion:- Resolution 2019-58A Resolution of theTooele City CouncilAdopting the ProposedTax Rate for FiscalYear 2019-2020- Resolution 2019-57A Resolution of theTooele City CouncilAdopting the FinalBudget for Tooele Cityfor F isca l Year2019-20204. AdjournMichelle Y. PittTooele City RecorderPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, Individuals Need-ing Special Accommo-dations Should NotifyMichelle Y. Pitt, TooeleCity Recorder, at435-843-2113 or [email protected], Prior to the Meeting.(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin August 13, 2019)

PUBLIC NOTICETooele City Depart-ment of Public Worksis looking for EagleScout Candidates whoneed to complete as e r v i c e p r o j e c t .Please contact SteveEvans, Public WorksD i r e c t o r , a t435-843-2148 or [email protected] for arrangementsabout projects forTooele City.(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin August 13 & 15,2019)

HAVING A yard sale?Advertise in the Tran-script

Public Notices Meetings

INVITATION TO BIDTooele City90 North MainTooele City, Utah�84074Notice is hereby giventhat Tooele City Cor-poration (OWNER) willaccept bids for con-struction of the SnowPlow Salt Rack, ac-cording to Drawingsand Specifications pre-pared by Ensign Engi-neering, and describedin general as:Work of this Construc-tion Contract com-prises the constructionof an 8-Bay SnowPlow Salt Rack, includ-ing installation of foot-ings, steel beams, andother construction ma-terials.Separate sealed bidswill be received by theOWNER in Room 227,of the Tooele City Mu-nicipal Offices locatedat 90 North Main,Tooele, Utah 84074until 11:00 AM onThursday August 22,2019, and then at saidoffice publicly openedand read aloud.Project Specificationswill be issued in digitalformat (PDF), and maybe obtained by con-tacting Tooele CityPublic Works Office,Room B17, 90 NorthMain, Tooele, Utah84074 beginning onAugust 2, 2019 duringoffice hours from 8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m. bycalling (435) 843-2130,option 1.� All Biddersmust register with theCity in order to be con-sidered for Award ofBid.Bid security in theamount of 5% of thebase bid will be re-quired to accompanybids.Prospective BIDDERSare encouraged to at-tend a pre-bid confer-ence which will be heldin Room 224 of theTooele City MunicipalOffices at 11:00 AM onWednesday August14, 2019.� The objectof the conference is toacquaint BIDDERswith the site condi-tions, specifications,and to answer anyquestions which BID-DERs may have con-cerning the project.All communicationrelative to the Projectshall be directed toSteve Evans, PublicWorks Director, priorto the opening of bidsat:TOOELE CITY COR-PORATION90 North MainTooele, Utah 84074Telephone: (435)843-2130, Option 1Steve Evans, PublicWorks Directoremail: [email protected] OWNER reservesthe right to reject anyor all bids; or to acceptor reject the whole orany part of any bid; toaward schedulesseparately or togetherto contractors, or towaive any informalityor technicality in anybid in the best interestof the City.� Only bidsgiving a firm quotationproperly signed will beaccepted.(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin August 6 & 13,2019)

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

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICE OFM E E T I N G A N DAGENDATooele County Councilof GovernmentsThe Tooele CountyCouncil of Govern-ments will hold a Pub-lic Meeting on Thurs-day, August 15, 2019at 6:00 p.m. in theAuditorium at theTooele County Build-ing, 47 South MainStreet, Tooele Utah.PUBLIC MEETING1. Welcome & Roll Call2. Approval of Minutesfor meeting held July18, 20193. Approval of Minutesfor meeting held June20, 20194. Complete CountCommittee5. 3rd Quarter LocalOption Sales Tax6. UDOT Transporta-tion Study Project7. COG CommitteeReports/Updates8. AdjournmentPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilityAct, individuals need-ing special accommo-dations during thismeeting should notifyStaff, Tooele CountyC o m m i s s i o n , a t435-843-3274 prior tothe meeting.(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin August 13, 2019)

Public Notices Trustees

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

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following de-scribed property will besold at public auctionto the highest bidder,payable in lawfulmoney of the UnitedStates at the time ofsale, at the TooeleCounty Courthouse,74 South 100 East,Tooele, UT 84074, onSeptember 11, 2019,at 1:00 p.m. of saidday, for the purpose offoreclosing a trustdeed dated October25, 2013, and exe-cuted by JASON L.HADLEY AND AN-GELA C. HADLEY,HUSBAND AND WIFEAS JOINT TENANTS,as Trustors, in favor ofMORTGAGE ELEC-TRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS, INC.("MERS") SOLELY ASN O M I N E E F O RACADEMY MORT-GAGE CORPORA-TION, ITS SUCCES-SORS AND ASSIGNSas Beneficiary, whichTrust Deed was re-corded on October 29,2013, as Entry No.391142, in the OfficialRecords of TooeleCounty, State of Utahcovering real propertypurportedly located at75 Deseret Circle,Grantsv i l le , Utah84029 in TooeleCounty, Utah, andmore particularly de-scribed as:LOT 5, J-K SUBDIVI-SION OF GRANTS-VILLE CITY, AC-CORDING TO THEPLAT THEREOF RE-CORDED IN THE OF-F ICE OF THETOOELE COUNTYRECORDER, STATEOF UTAH.� Tax ID:09-009-0-0005The current Benefici-ary of the trust deed isUTAH HOUSINGCORPORATION, andthe record owners ofthe property as of therecording of the Noticeof Default are JASONL. HADLEY AND AN-GELA C. HADLEY,HUSBAND AND WIFEAS JOINT TENANTS.Bidders must tender tot h e t r u s t e e a$20,000.00 deposit atthe sale and the bal-ance of the purchaseprice by 2:00 p.m. theday following the sale.�Both the deposit andthe balance must bepaid to Lincoln Title In-surance Agency in theform of a wire transfer,cashier's check or cer-tified funds.� Cash pay-men ts , pe rsona lchecks or trust checksare not accepted.�DATED: August 1,2019�LINCOLN TITLE IN-SURANCE AGENCYBy: Shelby K. IrvinIts: Authorized AgentTelephone: (801)476-0303web site: www.smith-knowles.comSK File No.� 17-0682(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin August 6, 13 &20, 2019)

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following de-scribed property will besold at public auctionto the highest bidder,payable in lawfulmoney of the UnitedStates at the time ofsale, at the TooeleCounty Courthouse,74 South 100 East,Tooele, UT 84074, onSeptember 11, 2019,at 1:00 p.m. of saidday, for the purpose offoreclosing a trustdeed dated October25, 2013, and exe-cuted by JASON L.HADLEY AND AN-GELA C. HADLEY,HUSBAND AND WIFEAS JOINT TENANTS,as Trustors, in favor ofMORTGAGE ELEC-TRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS, INC.("MERS") SOLELY ASN O M I N E E F O RACADEMY MORT-GAGE CORPORA-TION, ITS SUCCES-SORS AND ASSIGNSas Beneficiary, whichTrust Deed was re-corded on October 29,2013, as Entry No.391142, in the OfficialRecords of TooeleCounty, State of Utahcovering real propertypurportedly located at75 Deseret Circle,Grantsv i l le , Utah84029 in TooeleCounty, Utah, andmore particularly de-scribed as:LOT 5, J-K SUBDIVI-SION OF GRANTS-VILLE CITY, AC-CORDING TO THEPLAT THEREOF RE-CORDED IN THE OF-F ICE OF THETOOELE COUNTYRECORDER, STATEOF UTAH.� Tax ID:09-009-0-0005The current Benefici-ary of the trust deed isUTAH HOUSINGCORPORATION, andthe record owners ofthe property as of therecording of the Noticeof Default are JASONL. HADLEY AND AN-GELA C. HADLEY,HUSBAND AND WIFEAS JOINT TENANTS.Bidders must tender tot h e t r u s t e e a$20,000.00 deposit atthe sale and the bal-ance of the purchaseprice by 2:00 p.m. theday following the sale.�Both the deposit andthe balance must bepaid to Lincoln Title In-surance Agency in theform of a wire transfer,cashier's check or cer-tified funds.� Cash pay-men ts , pe rsona lchecks or trust checksare not accepted.�DATED: August 1,2019�LINCOLN TITLE IN-SURANCE AGENCYBy: Shelby K. IrvinIts: Authorized AgentTelephone: (801)476-0303web site: www.smith-knowles.comSK File No.� 17-0682(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin August 6, 13 &20, 2019)

Public Notices Water User

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

Public Notices Miscellaneous

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

GRANTSVILLE CITYNOTICE OF ADOP-TION OF ORDI-NANCESNOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that on August7, 2019 the GrantsvilleCity Council enactedthe following ordi-nances:Ordinance 2019-15amending the Grants-ville Land Use andManagement Code(GLUDMC) pertainingto Chapter 21 Subdivi-sion Regulations –Section 7 Financial As-surance and associ-ated definitions inChapter 2, includingsubdivision improve-ment agreements.Ordinance 2019-18amending the P.U.D.requirements for resi-dential development inChapter 12 and Chap-ter 21 of the Grants-ville City Land Use andManagement Code.These ordinances willtake effect upon thepublication of this no-tice. These ordinancesmay be reviewed or acopy may be obtainedfrom the GrantsvilleCity Recorder at 429East Main Street,Grantsv i l le Utah.(435.884.3411)DATED this 12th dayof August, 2019.Christine WebbGrantsville City Re-corder(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin August 13, 2019)

NOTICENOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN THAT THEREWILL BE AN AUDITOF THE VOTINGEQUIPMENT USEDFOR THE AUGUST13, 2019 PRIMARYELECTION. THEAUDIT WILL BE HELDAT THE TOOELECOUNTY BUILDING,COMMISSION CHAM-BERS ROOM #310 AT10:00 A.M. ONTHURSDAY, AUGUST15, 2019.Marilyn K. GilletteTooele County Clerk(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin August 13, 2019)

PUBLIC NOTICETooele City is lookingfor Free, clean fill dirt.Please contact SteveEvans, Tooele CityDepartment of PublicWorks, 435-843-2148or at [email protected](Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin August 13 & 15,2019)

NOTICE OF ADOP-TION AND NOTICEOF RIGHTSIn the District Court ofUtah, Divdist JudicialDistrict Tooele County,47 South Main Street,Tooele, Utah 84074In the matter of theAdoption of Jaiden Al-exander LewisC a s e N u m b e r192300031Judge BatesThe State of Utah To:Michele Lynn Johnson.You are being notifiedof the Peition to AdoptJaiden AlexanderLewis.You have the right tofile a motion to inter-vene with this court. Ifyour motion to inter-vene is granted, youhave the right to op-pose this adoption.If you want to inter-vene in this adoption,you must file a motionto intervene with thiscourt within 30 daysafter August 20, 2019,which is the last datethis 0notice will bepublished. And youmust serve a copy ofyour motion on peti-tioner or their attorneyat: Kelli Lewis, 772 NMain Street #276,Tooele UT, 84074.If you do not file a mo-tion to intervene withinthat time, you waiveany right to further no-tice in this adoption,forfeit all rights in rela-tion to the adoptee,and are barred frombringing or maintainingany action to assertany interest in theadoptee.You may obtain a copyof the Petition to Adoptand other court re-cords in this case onlyif your motion to inter-vene is ganted.You also have right toconsent to this adop-tion.Date: July 12, 2019,Kelli Lewis772 N Main Street#276, Tooele, UT84074(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin July 30, August 6,13 & 20, 2019)

Page 15: Vol. 126 No. 21 $1.00 New machine …tooeleonline.com/.../2019/08/8-13-19-Transcript-Bulletin.pdf · 2019-08-08 · B TRANSCRIPT ULLETIN TOOELE TUESDAY August 13, 2019 Vol. 126 No

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN B5TUESDAY August 13, 2019

Public Notices Miscellaneous

NOTICE OF ADOP-TION AND NOTICEOF RIGHTSIn the District Court ofUtah, Divdist JudicialDistrict Tooele County,47 South Main Street,Tooele, Utah 84074In the matter of theAdoption of Jaiden Al-exander LewisC a s e N u m b e r192300031Judge BatesThe State of Utah To:Michele Lynn Johnson.You are being notifiedof the Peition to AdoptJaiden AlexanderLewis.You have the right tofile a motion to inter-vene with this court. Ifyour motion to inter-vene is granted, youhave the right to op-pose this adoption.If you want to inter-vene in this adoption,you must file a motionto intervene with thiscourt within 30 daysafter August 20, 2019,which is the last datethis 0notice will bepublished. And youmust serve a copy ofyour motion on peti-tioner or their attorneyat: Kelli Lewis, 772 NMain Street #276,Tooele UT, 84074.If you do not file a mo-tion to intervene withinthat time, you waiveany right to further no-tice in this adoption,forfeit all rights in rela-tion to the adoptee,and are barred frombringing or maintainingany action to assertany interest in theadoptee.You may obtain a copyof the Petition to Adoptand other court re-cords in this case onlyif your motion to inter-vene is ganted.You also have right toconsent to this adop-tion.Date: July 12, 2019,Kelli Lewis772 N Main Street#276, Tooele, UT84074(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin July 30, August 6,13 & 20, 2019)

NOTICE TO CREDI-TORS AND AN-NOUNCEMENT OFAPPOINTMENTEstate of DONNALOUISE CUNNING-HAM, Deceased.P r o b a t e N o .193300025PAMELA BUTLERwhose address is POBox 828, Grantsville,Utah 84029 and AL-LEN L. CUNNINGHAMwhose address is POBox 905, Grantsville,Utah 84029 have beenappointed Co-PersonalRepresentative of theestate of the abovenamed decedent. Allpersons having claimsagainst the above es-tate are required topresent them to theundersigned or to theClerk of the Court onor before the 13th dayof November, 2019, orsaid claims shall beforever barred.PAMELA BUTLERPO Box 828Grantsville, UT, 84029Telephone No. (435)699-4766ALLEN L. CUNNING-HAMPO Box 905Grantsville, UT 84029Telephone: (435)840-1556(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin August 13, 20 &27, 2019)

NOTICE TO CREDI-TORS AND AN-NOUNCEMENT OFAPPOINTMENTEstate of JOSE LUISMEDINA-BAL-LADERES AKA JOSEMEDINA, Deceased.P r o b a t e N o .193300076TINA AVILES whoseaddress is 422 Coun-try Club, StansburyPark, Utah 84074 hasbeen appointed Per-sonal Representativeof the estate of theabove named dece-dent. All persons hav-ing claims against theabove estate are re-quired to present themto the undersigned orto the Clerk of theCourt on or before the13th day of November,2019, or said claimsshal l be foreverbarred.TINA AVILES422 Country Club,Stansbury Park, UT84074Telephone No. (435)830-9083(Published in theTooele Transcript Bul-letin August 13, 20 &27, 2019)

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TOOELE

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Fourteen-year-old Joe Lacey knows that Tooele, Utah, is a town divided. Tensions are already running high with the Depression making money tight and jobs scarce. But then Sterling Harris comes to town, a new coach with a daring plan to turn things around and to fi nd victory for his football team and unity for Tooele.

Inspired by true events, this uplifting sports story will bring you a fresh perspective on the past and hope for the future.

It will take more than a ball and a coach to heal

this broken town.

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“I feel like I’m getting to know the characters in Sterling Bridge just as they are getting to know them-selves. The thoughtful layering makes for a very compelling read.”

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“This heartwarming story shows how common goals and victories can break down barriers and lead to acceptance and brotherhood.”

– Jo Schaff erAuthor of Against Her Will and

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“A fi nely detailed, inspiring sto-ry… told through the eyes of a kid [whose] troubled world [is] about to change radically because of an extraordinary man.”

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Bulletin BoardTooele

Utah Hunter Education Courses The fourth set of Utah Hunter Education Courses will be held August 13, 14 and 15 for Range 17. Classes are held from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Tooele County Health Building, 151 N. Main St., Tooele. Range times will be announced. State law requires students to attend all sessions of class. Before attending a class, all students must purchase a Hunter Education Voucher for $10 from a license agent or vender, bring the voucher to the class, and give it to the instructor. The voucher includes all costs for the class and includes a small game license that is validated upon completion of the class. For more information call Gene at 435-882-4767 or Bryan at 435-882-6795.

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

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

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

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

Bingo is backSt. Marguerite Catholic Church has started its bingo games again on Fridays starting at 6:45 p.m. Come and have a good time. Food is available. Call 435-882-3860 with questions.

GrantsvilleGrantsville Irrigation Company Grantsville Irrigation has issued agricul-tural users two regular turns. The meters were read Monday, July 15. Residents are responsible to monitor their own use to ensure the allotted 250,000 gallons per residential share is not exceeded. There are penalties for using more water than is allowed. Contact the office at 435-884-3451 or [email protected] if you have any questions.

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

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

Daughters of Utah PioneersThe DUP is seeking any family histories, photographs, books, stories or vintage artifacts (before 1900) to display at the DUP Grantsville Museum, located at 378 W. Clark St. (in the basement of the J.

Reuben Clark Farmhouse across from the Grantsville Cemetery). For more informa-tion, call Ellen Yates at 435-884-0253 or Coralie Lougey at 435-884-3832. Visit www.grantsvilledupmuseum.com or www.exploretooele.com.

SchoolsTooele Junior High RegistrationNew student registration for students who have just moved to Tooele will begin this month after August 12 registration will be by appointment only. For more informa-tion call 435-833-1921.

Grantsville Elementary Community CouncilThe next Grantsville Elementary Community Council meeting will be held on Monday, August 19 at 6:30 p.m. in the GES library during our Back-to-School Night. All parents are encouraged to attend. It will last one hour and there is lots of good information. We will be hold-ing elections for open seats on the coun-cil. Hope to see you there.

THS Class of ’64 ReunionThe Tooele High School Class of ’64 Reunion will be held on Friday, Aug. 16 and Saturday, Aug. 17. For more informa-tion contact Gayle: 435-882-4766, Lynda: 435-882-4400, or Lynette: 435-882-0077.

Story and Craft Hour Join us every Monday at 10 a.m. at the Tooele Family Center-PIRC as we enjoy the adventures of books and make fun crafts. For more information, call 435-833-1934 ext. 1410. We are located at West Elementary School, 451 W. 300 South, Tooele. Please enter through the south side doors.

Free Preschool HourEvery Tuesday at 10 a.m., the Tooele Family Center-PIRC has a fun activity hour of learning, singing and creating. The class is for all children up to 5 years old. Please come and enjoy the fun. For more infor-mation, call (435) 833-1934 ext. 1410. We are located at West Elementary School, 451 W. 300 South, Tooele. Please enter through the south side doors.

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

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

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

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

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

Free developmental evaluationDDI VANTAGE Early Intervention offers a variety of services to families with infants and toddlers from birth to age 3. Individualized services are available to enhance development in communication, motor development, cognition, social/emotional development, self-help skills and health concerns. Contact us for a free developmental evaluation at 435-833-0725.

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

United Methodist DinnerTooele United Methodist Church offers a free dinner every Wednesday. Coffee and social hour starts at 4 p.m. and dinner is served from 5-6 p.m. All are welcome.

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

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

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

MooseMeals at the LodgeFriday and Saturday night dinners will be served from 5 to 9 p.m. Friday night din-ners change weekly or you can order from the menu items Saturday night. All meals are for a reasonable price. No orders taken after 8:45 p.m. Daily lunch specials are available at the lodge from 11 a.m. For members and their guests only.

EntertainmentThere will be a jam session on Saturday, August 17 from 2 to 6 p.m.

BreakfastBreakfast will be served every Sunday meeting at 10:30 a.m. until gone. Please attend the men’s meeting at 9:30 a.m. and the women’s meeting at 11:30 a.m., and enjoy a great breakfast.

Veteran’s Appreciation DinnerA veteran’s appreciation dinner will be held on Wednesday August 14 at 6 p.m.

Supreme Governor in TooeleRodney A. Hammond, Supreme Governor of the Loyal Order of Moose, will speak at the Lodge on Wednesday, August 14 as part of his travels across the country. We encourage all men and women members to attend this event and to meet our new Supreme Governor. A meet and greet will be held at 5 p.m., followed by dinner at 6 p.m.

EaglesSunday Breakfasts Breakfasts will be served every Sunday morning this month from 9 to 11 a.m. Order from the menu or have the special for $5. Adults pay $7 from the menu and children 11 years and under are $3.50. Bad Beer is available. Public invited.

New Door Key CardsNew door key cards are now available. Please bring your current membership card to the bar to get a new key.

Drink Tokens ExpiringAll drink tokens expired on Sunday, June 30. Chips will no longer be used.

Grand Worthy President Meet and GreetOn August 13, come on down to the Aerie home to meet the Grand Worthy President!

Veteran Car ShowThe Veteran Car Show will be on August 17 at the park, 11 a.m.

Auxiliary MeetingThe Auxiliary Meeting will be held August 19 at 7 p.m.

Planning MeetingThe Planning Meeting will be held August 20 at 7 p.m.

Past President’s DinnerThe Past President’s Dinner, hosted by Diane Moore will be held August 21 at 7 p.m.

ElksMeetingsNo meetings will be held during the month of July. Our first meeting after July will be held on Tuesday, Aug. 27. Lodge floor meetings are held the second and fourth Tuesday of every month. House committee meetings are held every first and third Tuesday of the month. All members are welcome and encouraged to attend.

Veteran’s Car ShowThe Veteran’s Car Show will be held in the park 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Registration is at 9 a.m., $15 per car.

Blood DriveA blood drive will be held August 17, in the park 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. To register through the Red Cross, use code: ELKS.

Fish FryThere will be a fish fry August 17, $10 per

person. A hot dog meal is $3 per person. Veterans eat free.

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

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

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

Ladies Community Club of TooeleTo view upcoming events, learn more about our organization, or to become a member, please visit gfwctooele.org.

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

Museum volunteers neededTooele Valley Museum & Historical Park is seeking volunteers. Do you enjoy history or science? Volunteers at the museum can gain new skills or practice old ones. We are looking for people to help with orga-nization, exhibit development, gardening and educational program development. Volunteer positions are seasonal and year round. Scheduling is flexible. Volunteers must be at least 16 years old. To apply or request more information, send email to: [email protected]

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

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

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

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

Tooele Family Al-AnonAl-Anon meetings are held Wednesdays at 11 a.m. in the Tooele Pioneer Museum’s

basement at the back of the building. For questions or more information, please call Allene at 435-830-0465 or Elizabeth at 435-884-0825 or 435-241-9200.

Tooele Al-Anon Choices 4UThis group meets Sundays at 5 p.m. at the Mountain Faith Lutheran Church, 560 S. Main St., Tooele. For more information, contact Gesele at 435-224-4015 or Jo-Ann at 435-849-4180.

Alcoholics AnonymousMeetings are held daily at noon and 8 p.m. at the Oasis Alano Club, 1120 W. Utah Ave. For more information, contact Lance at 435-496-3691 or Wendy at 801-694-2624.

Alcoholics AnonymousAlcoholics Anonymous meetings are also held every Tuesday and Thursday at 7 p.m., at St. Barnabus Church, 1784 Aaron Dr., Tooele.

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

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

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

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

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

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

Disabled American Veterans Chapter 20The “Jordan M. Byrd” Tooele County Chapter for the Disabled American Veterans holds monthly general member-ship meetings at the Pioneer Museum, 47 E. Vine Street in Tooele, every third Thursday of the month at 8 p.m. Those who wish to attend the leadership meet-ing at 7 p.m. are welcome to listen to the appointed members’ meeting. All Tooele County veterans are invited to attend. Disabled American Veterans (DAV) will hold its monthly executive and general meetings on the third Thursday of every month at the Pioneer Museum (rear entrance). The executive meeting will be at 7 p.m. and the general meeting will be at 8 p.m. The DAV is looking for volunteer drivers — no DAV membership is required. Will need a VA physical. No monthly meetings are held in December. Call commander James Yale at 435-849-0521 or senior vice commander Dustee

Thomas at 435-830-8487.

Health Department and Aging Services hoursThe Tooele County Health Department and Aging Services’ new hours of opera-tion are Monday-Thursday, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Friday from 8 a.m. to noon. Check out our calendar on our main page for holiday hours and closures. For more information call 435-277-2301.

Parkinson’s disease Support GroupA diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease can be overwhelming for the newly diagnosed. Tooele has a support group for persons with Parkinson’s disease and their caregiv-ers. You can learn how others are coping with PD and how to live well. We meet the third Friday of each month from 1-2 p.m. at Tooele Technology College, 88 S. Tooele Blvd., Tooele. For information, call Hal at 435-840-3683.

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

Military Items WantedWhen you no longer want your military items, do not take them to Deseret Industries or a thrift store. Bring them — hats, helmets, dress uniforms, boots, shoes, pants, jackets, backpacks, belts, canteens, pouches, old photos, etc. — to 775 S. Coleman Street. They will be displayed with honor and respect. Call Matthew or Tina at 435-882-8688.

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

Rocky Mountain HospiceWant to have more meaning in your life. Do you want to do something that is satisfying and of great service to your community? Then become a Rocky Mountain Hospice volunteer. No experi-ence required. All training, background check and TB tests provided by Rocky Mountain. The only requirement is your desire to help someone in need. Please contact Diane Redman at Rocky Mountain Hospice at 801-397-4904.

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

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

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

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

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

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 organiza-tions, 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 adver-tising department at 882-0050. Information must be delivered no later than 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date.

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TUESDAY August 13, 2019B8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

When someone submits a picture to Smith’s website, weareraisingmen.com, hold-ing a sign that says, “I accept the 50 Yard Challenge,” they’ve joined him in the project. The program also counts raking leaves and shoveling snow the same as mowing.

After Liam submitted his picture, he received ear and eye protection and a shirt from Smith’s organization.

Liam wore the earplugs once before he lost them.

“They’re nice cause lawn mowers are loud,” he said.

However, one of Liam’s regular veterans named Carlos let him borrow his mil-itary-grade mufflers a couple of times. Liam thought those were the best.

Liam and his brothers, Peyton, 16, and Mathias, 13, switch off mowing the lawn at their home that trained Liam for Smith’s challenge. He said he doesn’t know which brother mows the lawn the best.

“I just do it and let my par-ents decide,” Liam said.

Kathie and Joseph England, Liam’s parents, were involved in the chal-lenge from the start — spe-cifically in finding lawns to mow. 

They started with fam-ily, then neighbors, then it branched out from there and included Facebook.

Liam said his biggest lawn took him a little over an hour to mow. Some yards were more difficult than others.

“One yard was really hard,” he said. “It was big and there were like hills on it. And it was hard to get to

the fence because when I was pushing it, it would like bring me down the hill.”

Liam thinks mowing 50 lawns is only “kind of fun,” and maybe only “kind of fun” in the hilly yard.

“Like on the hill and I’d fall down. It was kind of fun I guess,” he said.

However, some of the yard owners were fun when they talked to him — like the young veteran who gave Liam military shoulder patches when he finished mowing.

His brother, Peyton, helped him with the hardest yards.

“I would go until I was tired,” Liam said. 

Then Peyton helped by finishing up in the back after Liam had mowed all the rest.

“It’s nice to be a part of something that helps out,” Peyton said. 

Carlos, the veteran with the military-grade sound mufflers, became a weekly job for Liam.

“Carlos is a veteran in the army,” Liam said. “His back got hurt, so it’s hard for him to push his lawn mower cause he’s got a pretty big lawn. I did it every single week. He appreciated it.”

When Kathie told her son that Carlos was moving, he sounded sad.

“It was the last lawn I mowed,” Liam said.

Joseph said mowing lawns made his son stronger. But Liam questioned that point a little.

“The first time, I mowed Carlos’ whole lawn,” he said. “Now I can’t do it. It’s worn me out.” 

After reflecting a moment, he decided differently.

“Well, it kind of did make me stronger,” he said.

Liam said morning is the best time to mow a lawn — and 9 a.m. is the perfect time.

“Because it’s not that hot,” he said. “I can just get it done and over with, and the rest of the day I have to play.”

Liam knows he has done a good job when the lawn is short.

Liam walked his lawn mower to homes that were up to three blocks away. However, Kathie played chauffeur, mom, and photog-rapher during the challenge.

 Kathie’s longest lawn mower drive was to Draper.

“My mom talked or read books on her phone while she waited,” Liam said.

Kathie tracked her son’s progress taking pictures on her phone to submit to the 50 Yard Challenge.

“She would come with us and take pictures of the lawn and like me doing it, and me with the person,” Liam said. The challenge also wanted before and after pictures of the lawn.

Liam completed the 50 Yard Challenge in May. Rodney Smith Jr. arrived at his house on July 9.

“My dad was looking out the window and saw him pull up. So I just walked out and I’m just like, ‘Hi,’” Liam said. 

Smith congratulated Liam, then gave him a black lawn mower, a leaf blower, a weed eater, and four additional shirts to add to the shirts he received for every 10 yards he mowed that say “Raising Men Lawn Care Service — giving back to the commu-nity.”

The Englands found out that Smith was shy but still managed to learn he was traveling across the country mowing the lawns of people affected by breast cancer with a pink lawn mower.

After Smith’s visit, Liam’s sister, Mishay, 15, decided to accept the 50 Yard Challenge as well and picked up where Liam left off.

“I just figured that Liam was doing it, so I should do it, too,” Mishay said. 

Her shirt says “Raising Women” because there are so many girls who want to par-ticipate.

So far Mishay has mowed seven lawns, and both she and Liam recognize the dan-gers of lurking bushes.

“There was this rose bush I didn’t realize was a rose bush, so I was trying to go under it and it tore up my hand,” Mishay said.

Yet, she’s motivated to finish the challenge by early summer 2020.

“It’s a way to serve people,” Mishay said. “It’s something that does not seem like it’s that huge. But for people that it’s difficult to mow their lawn, it is a big thing for them.”

The Englands may look into providing lawn mowers so that others can complete the challenges with the lawn mowers Smith gives for fin-ishing. For now, Liam said people have to ask him per-mission to use his black lawn mower. 

Liam feels proud he com-pleted the challenge.

“It’s nice for people who don’t have time to do it, or can’t do it, and I’ve gotten to know the community better,” he said.

Liam isn’t done serving, either. He said he’s growing out his hair to donate to Wigs for Kids, an organization that donates wigs to children who suffer from hair loss because of cancer or other reasons.

When Liam grows up, he would like his children to do the 50 Yard Challenge as well.

“I mowed the lawns, so I guess you can, too,” he said he’d tell his children.

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FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Liam England mows the lawn of his home in Stansbury. Liam England has mowed lawns of nearby neighbors-walking his lawn mower to homes that were up to three blocks away.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Peyton England mows the lawn at his Stansbury home. Peyton England would help his younger brother Liam England mow lawns as part of the 50 Yard Challenge and soon Peyton took on the challenge himself.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Mishay England decided to take part in the 50 Yard Challenge after her brother Liam England began the challenge.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTOS

Mishay England (top) holds a weed eater she uses to chop weeds. Peyton England above holds a blower he uses to clean up the grass.