OCR Text |
Show TT ie e l te Historica Register Sta l Church on i v r e t r o P Old Brees Bn ve * ee * Douglas Geary uses paper and crayon to bring out gravestone inscriptions at Coalville. ~ ¢ ‘i ‘ The old Porterville church, long empty and deserted and now occupied by the Tom Berg- man family, gained well- deserved honor this week by its placement on the torical register. The Historical State hisSociety has made extensive investigation of every community in Utah, and ——_— STEEL WORK DONE has come up with a number of deserving points which have strong bearing on early history of the state. This lovely old red brick church, built in 1898 by “all men in the community” and dedicated by President Joseph . F. Smith, stands as a monument to the faith of the early settlers. The building, which is one of the few tourist attractions left in the area, is unique because of its prominent setting in the community. : Discarded by the LDS Church in 1942, it was abandoned until three years ago, when it was novated and make a very able home, doing nearly selves. remodeled inside to attractive and livwith the Bergmans all the work them- SALT LAKE CITY — Construction crews have completed {the installation of more than {6,800 tons of structure steel in the new 30-story LDS Church office building here. - Authorities report work on the 800,000 square foot structure on schedule. | COALVILLE CHURCH OFFICE eB Jt will house all offices and \departments of the LDS Church ; except the General Authorities | jWho will continue to occupy the ric church offices at 47 E, ‘South Temple. Steel columns for the tower jwhich rises between two fourstory wings are of welded steel The tower and its two adjoining wings will be served by 21 elevators, six of them 1,000-feet per minute highrise type. Elevators will ride on about 82.000 feet of three-eighth, onehalf and five-eighth inch elevator rope. The structure will be faced with 225,000 square feet of white quartzite cast stone from Utah’s en I hes dee foot. . Fil er — lyn, course insulation glass. ante New the ed- |group Brooklyn went to Museum ,,and North Davis counties. the graveyard association the of Goals j of the oldest churches the coming year deer Bs oT The first a adage on York, gravestone rubbing-|5+t paper and make He said , for will include sateen n 1 active participation in such community projects as drug abuse education, Health Caree) Days and civil disaster pre- firgtaduate, museum art!pensive paper he might use his abachelor bY | work permanent. qpat the a Morgan High went on to earn a degree University in pharmacy of Utah in his experiment began graveston1952. ‘taping thick pads of blank paper|idea of rubbing feeliy Entering the university’s Sonal a some give over the stones, then rubbed the may College of Law, Mr. Ulrich wonderf a is paper with heavy dark crayons.|at first, but it He bea | Slowly, the carved word ap-\way to record some of the ‘peared oe the paper. es tif writing and pictures whii from now might be gon ee one nay SE | Bi “And,” said Douglas, “‘it is ‘out clearly on the paper. | great way to learn a lot a ; ) graduated with a Juris Doctor, dt degree in 1995. | master in lthe history of a town.” OLDEST GRAVE The first grave in the ceme ; ; Mr. and Mrs. Ogden eight children. He is currently — serving as assistant scout- Scout ; boy who wandered from his par‘ents’ pioneer home in Hoytsville and was lost and died May 1, 1862. One weathered stone dis-| exterior is of bronze colored lass. All heating and cooling of the building will be accomp- lished by a heat pump system iclosed ee the resting place of a | Ulrich live in © and are the parents of tery was that of a two-year-old The the struc-| a resentatives in Weber, Morgan, you lives. grouP' Mrs, Grant Geary, Coalvill Paredness. : q after practicing with ine Mr. Ulrich, Brook-|_oi a in enrolled of students finch’. deep steel members spaced feet on centers. “Ae say? No, killed May Drug, Sherwood replaces Harold Giles in the 1, 19Morganization which is compris: . ng 120 are weighibeams pounds18-) . you ‘Walter Ulrich and the late Mr. Ulrich has been installed as 1973-74 president of the Weber Pharmaceutical Association. He will be assisted by president-elect Carl Casperson, vice president Lowell Rouse and secretary-treasurer Miss Leota Craner. Mr. Ulrich, pharmacist own- er of the / Troop g ~ Fred E, Ulrich, son of Mrs. ‘built om the site was erecte . eae of the oldest graves in the; 654 icity cemetery. The letters and) SPOOKY FEELING designs on many were illegible. | Douglas, the son of Mr. at group Douglas had heard of a 24 shapes structural Would ‘ucational and artistic, saysjone Douglas Geary, 13. He went tore supplied by four church-owned each producing 2,500 galwells, thick \plate up to five inches lons of water per minute. pieces 2,650 About Valley. Park . d weighing up to 936 pounds Ror foot. par nders are rolled wide- flanged pranks, loween Windows, which will by the stone facing panels, are of the pivoting type, glazed with one-inch — man _ ua ea of Guise Countyed (Carbon |i,mine& Scofield repmanufacturers’ iceutical took which disaster to rub a gravestone? Hal-| dare these bas-relief maps arking garage with a capacity wings, ve of the worldwide the $31 million facility will be or 1,600 cars has been com- indicatiof the church. scope ithe tallest building in the state. pleted. be shaded - When completed in July 1972, young | Deseret News Staff Writer | ng a total of 9,300| ture is provided by a moment|of stone weighi on the build-| resisting frame for the full tons will be used ing. northheight of the building in a The most impressive features’ south direction, In the east-west will be masdirection diagonal X-bracing is of the stone work the eastern and utilized to the 16th floor level sive replicas of Located with a moment frame from western hemispheres. on both the north and south there to the top. four-story underground sides of the two three-level A are | Youth 13, Tries Stone Rubbing By JAN PADFIELD urse g nCo LDS Build iOn ' For er Resident Pharmaceutical = Association Head —_———— &; 3 Fane as 192. |