OCR Text |
Show Page 4 SOUTH EAST INDEPENDENT Sugar House, Utah Thursday, April, 4, 1957 Literary Club Entertain Mrs. David Hatch entertained the ML Air Literary Club, Mon-day, April 1. Mrs. Benson L. Hathaway reviewed the book, "Dr. Pygmalian, by Maxwell Maltz, M.D. Mrs. James Whitney, Mrs. Evan Royle, Mrs. Orson Goddard, and Mrs. Greggory Hosford were in-vited guests. Grant Stake Holds Quarterly Sessions Grant Stake of the LDS Church held its quarterly conference last Saturday and Sunday. Sessions opened Saturday in the Grant Fifth Ward chapel, 3153-9t- h East St., with a Priesthood leader-ship meeting. Sunday sessions were held in the South East Stake Tabernacle, 2005-9t-h East SL, in the morning and afternoon with Elder Dilworth S. Young of the First Council of Seventy as the presiding authority. Final meeting was a special Mutual Improvement Association gathering Sunday evening at the tabernacle. Westminster Offers New Scholarships Two new scholarships are being provided for Westminster College students, it was announced today by Mr. Lincoln G. Kelly and Dr. Frank E. Duddy, Jr., College presi. dent. Mr. Kelly is Deputy for Utah of the Supreme Council of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, Southern Jurisdiction, USA. Funds for these scholarships are being made available for a five year period by the four coordinate bodies of the Scottish Rite of Free-masonry in the Orient of Utah. Each valued at about $500 per year, to be applied to tuition and other costs, the scholarships are to be awarded to deserving students on the bases of character, aca-demic achievement in high or other secondary school, and need. Starts Today 5 Big Days Ttliytis lnrty fcnnior md jvwer only an actor so eh u Bart LwcAstei could flY It. TECHNICOLOR TjSTA lltltHM ;.,Plt Robertson) Starts Tuesday Open 6 PM Jeff Chandler ) San Dalley Joanne Drue David Niven "Drango" ''i,Men ) Women" HELP WANTED FEMALE! YOUNG WOMAN 30 to 50 to act as "No. 1 Boy" in a fast moving professional office in Sugar House. Mornings only, 9 AM to 1 PM, Mondays through Fridays. If we could shut our eyes and choose, she would have these marked quali-fications: Good health, happy, cheer-ful personality and cheerful voice. Real, unsophisticated charm. Likes people and knows how to make everyone feel needed and important. She must be able to take pressure and to constantly meet dead-line- s. This means vitality, speed, ability to !i TYipntflllv organize and pet W( We SERVE the FINEST! JW Pj ... Halibut . . . Smelt . . . Sardines ' f ) i f J ... Shrimp from Louisiana ... W. o t first things first She should be a rapid typ-ist, a good speller, able to compose her own letters. Also able to decipher boss's scrib-bled notes. She will handle membership in a state professional associ. ation. Maintain records, issue cards and certificates, file, issue professional magazine, answer all kinds of mail, answer telephone and make decisions. She will write up deposit slips and make bank deposits. Run addressograph. Keep office as spic and span as an operating room, and not let the boss get her goat. (He's really a nice guy but often gets impatient and wants yesterday what he didn't ask for until 4 PM this afternoon, if you get what we mean.) Oh! yes - - - she should live in Sugar House, the closer to intersection of 21st South and 11th East, the better. (And - - - no coffee break, please. Four hours straight through aren't like taking a beach-head.) Telephone Mr. Mack, CRest-woo- d 55 after 6 PM Friday, Saturday, Sunday. For news of this week's events, parties, birthdays, reunions, civic news of the southeast area call Emma, HTJ 61. ITuo neighbors, MissJane and Miss Bea I et ac Thursday foryears just at three I !lj bf Jytalked ofhigh prices, I Jf 11377 tyr Newfangled devices, I And nibbled on I 0m Cae anc tea' j 1 But mr story turns gloomy and gray-y- f I Most reluctantly Jane moved away, !m A 1 Though they'd not meet 'tilfall, 1 M Jane said brightly, We'll call, r 7 I 1 I And long distance Q lj I j can brighten our day." vt f I eac Thursday prdsely at eight I I $ J MissJane and Miss Bea, j Bubbling over with gleei rWp belong distance for Jy) f each tete-a-tet- e: I 0) y rSST someone yj&si voice ' you'd hear tonight? rwll'l' REMODEL IW YOUR ,0m?Q KITCHEN m modern BIRCH II Wlm$ntt IEana& II I presents your dream kitchen in beautiful glowing birch. Major Line cabinets cure l -- ' f ready to install . . pre-finish- ed, using " r the same methods as in fine furniture. Hardware is In lustrous copper. CALL OF WRITE FOR I NOTHING DOWN I FREE ESTIMATE TODAY! UP TO 60 MONTHS TO PAY! . lit Payment Starts Aug. 1, 1957 INO-4V- Ol I 1 ACAP1EMY BUniLIIDEKS 1946 SOUTH MAIN I I i ii. r I IGE SKATING For Fun and Health" 111 6-8- 61 1 Hygeia ICELAND 12th East, 21st South East Mill Creek Man Appointed to Office An East Mill Creek man, Stan-ford P. Darger, has been appointed lew executive secretary of the Salt Lake Retail Merchants Bureau. Mr. Darger, who lives at 1773 Millcreek Way, will assume the new position April 15, according to a joint announcement by David Ellison, president of the bureau, and Gus P. Backman, executive secretary of the Salt Lake Cham-ber of Commerce. He will have his offices at the Chamber of Com-merce. Mr. Darger is a former Sugar House businessman, From 1950 to 1954, he operated the Sugar House Hostess Service, which welcomed new residents into the area. The position he now leaves is sales representative with luggage dealers from five western states. He has been setting up promo-tional and sales training programs for the past two years. He replaces Weston E. Hamilton in his new position. Mr. Darger is a native of Salt Lake City and was educated in Salt Lake City schools. He holds a degree in sales administration from the school of business at the University of Utah. He is married to the former Arlene Barlow and has three girls and two boys. TRA VELERS . . . Home again following a marvel-ous' vacation in Hawaii are Mr. and Mrs Glen Walton, and Mrs. Walton's'parents, Dr. and Mrs W. Pyott. Glen renewed acquaintances with former friends made during his missionary stay on the islands. They also enjoyed surf-ridin- g, and flying over the island of Hawaii. They visited museums which he remarked could not equal the Sons of Utah Pioneer Village Museum. While on the islands they stayed at the Wakiki Biltmore Hotel. Visitors Arrive For Conference Conference-goer- s are beginning to move into Salt Lake City for the 127th annual session of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. The conference, with Pres. David O. McKay presiding, will open Friday at 10 a.m. in the Taber-nacle on historic Temple Square. Pres. McKay will be assisted by his counselors, Stephen L. Richards and J. Reuben Clark Jr. Sessions will be held daily at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Friday, Satur-day and Sunday. A special mis-sionary meeting will be held in the Tabernacle Friday at 7 p.m. Mis-sion presidents, all stake mission presidents and the presidencies of stakes are requested to attend. Sugar House Pioneer Doctor Dies In Calif. Dr. Charles Wesley Stewart, 83, a pioneer Sugar House physician died Friday in a hospital at Bur-ban- k, after a long illness. He is well remembered by early residents of this area when as a young doctor he began his practice in the city. He is given credit for pioneering X-ra- y treatment in Utah in 1908 when on the staff at the Holy Cross Hospital. He was a native of Pennsylvinia and attended Colgate College, Hamilton, N.Y. and Wesleyan Uni-versity, Middleton, Conn., before graduating in medicine at the University of Chicago. Survivors include his widow, Annie, and a niece, Mrs. Edward Overton of Encino, Calif. Services were conducted Monday and burial was in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale. IIOL. TO GET POST OFFICE A Holladay area branch post office will be established . soon according to announcement from Post Office officials. Investigation of possible sites for the new station is now being made by postal officials. The new branch will serve the fast-growi- ng area from 9th East St. to the mountains and 39th South to 820O South St. An esti-mated 28,000 persons are now living in this district which in-cludes Cottonwood Heights, Butler-vill- e and Greenfield Village. The district has grown from 12,295 persons in 1954 to 28,328, accord-ing to Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co. figures. Popu-lation is expected to hit 44,197 by 1960. The new station will operate like branches now serving Murray, South Salt Lake and Kearns. It will employ 18 workers. |