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Show around the C O R ! 7" Nj SUGAR HOUSE Ej j With the Editor J Who do you think is managing the Mario theater these days during the absence on vacation of the veteran Bill Burt? It's J Dick Sutherland, a young man who started as an usher in the theater game and rose rapidly to the managerial rank through conscientious application to duty coupled with natural ability. Dick who recently completed a stretch of better than two and one half years in the merchant marine during - which he saw plenty of hot action in the Pacific, Pa-cific, has worked in most of the downtown Intermountain theater the-ater houses at one time or another, an-other, and upon completing his present assignment will become assistant manager of the Centre. We've known Dick since he' was Jf a little tad, having worked in the newspaper business for many years with his dad. He's a son of Mr. and Mrs. George C. Sutherland, 2 818 Chadwick. George, by the way, is just recovering re-covering from an operation. We wish him a speedy recovery, and to Dick, congratulations and the best of everything in your new job. Dr. W. H. Reherd, president emeritus of Westminster, and his grandson, Bobby Steele, are getting back to nature on a fishing and camping trip up in the Flathead lake country of Montana. Hugo Ebmeyer was rejoicing over the arrival of a great-grandchild 'this week. A 7-pound, 9-ounce, 9-ounce, daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Hay, 2168 S. 19th E., last Saturday night at the L. D. S. hospital. This is the couple's first child. Mrs. Hay before be-fore her marriage was Lillian " Ebmeyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Ebmeyer. Bill Marz of the Wasateh Cleaning returned last week from a two-weeks' trip with his wife and two youngsters in Yellowstone park. An affair we were sorry to miss was an open house given for Preston Grover, noted AP war correspondent just home on a visit from India. We started in the newspaper business with Preston at the Deseret News in the early twenties worked on his staff on the Chronicle at the U., and watched him rise steadily with the AP from Boise bureau manager to top-flight foreign correspondent. He was in Berlin just before the war, and in Africa during the heavy fighting there, later heading up the China-Burma-India theater news division. A really able writer and a swell guy. After all i these years he ends up in India and we land in Sugar House. Fishermen who have been waiting for some good fly fishing, fish-ing, or wondering where to find some, need wait and wonder no longer, according 1 to Lee Kay, who has just returned from a jaunt to the southern half of the state. "Fishing in Panguitch lake, Fish lake and Navajo lake Is phenomenal," Kay reports. "Fly fiserhmen are going out and returning in short order with their limits of big rainbows." |