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Show ,-., 17 7 -- 7- -, 7 ...- 7,,, , . . , ,,,y1, .., - , - - , , , ,,,:;, ' ,. , V - - .,. , -- - , - , - ""- , ,. ' ' , , , ,, ' . , , ....,. , .j, ,' ' ',i. I L. Basement Construction of a $2,500,000 catalytic processing plant at the Industrial Center, 1700 South Redwood-Roawas assured Thursday following signing of a lease for some 30 acres at the center by the Filtrol Corporation. The company, which operates plants in Los Angeles and Jackson, Miss., processes halloysite clay for use as a catalytic agent in oil refining. It has been purchasing the mineral from the Eureka area for some time. Leland S. Swaner, manager of the center, reported that representatives of Filtrol would be in Salt Lake City soon to complete plans to construct the plant. He said l 100 to 125 in the Salt Lake the company may employ ' i . , -- ) p,reo 1:10t,, ( loit I ' Right ':.; ? fo-4"..- ' k i : ; ., tots Rove ". ,,,. 5outh l ' ',, : 4. ,.,.. ., .4 4 . -1'..51 e 041 -- , ti - . i til .. ii:'-- is , . FROZEN FOODS - -- .,-,- - Housewives Warm To Freezer Usage , .,,a,. F7 ,.,, ,,si u ,', -- Annex - -- . ''''.' - ., , May Make ' . '.. . I Grove Provo Murray 3,183 1,941 28,890 18,071 8,998 5,740 Kaysville Logan 16,802 11,868 .." , , na 'nr I six-ye- ar 3 , f s es P. '''.! - t"--- - '. ....! , ' -- - , ... it - -r.- - , i ,, IOW, , - COMES VARIETY I - :....- ' -- . ' - .,; A , i :s . :,,, ,, 4, , , Salt Lake City had a unit of Variety International Thursday after Wednesday's charter night presentation ceremony at the Hotel Utah which included a stirring tribute to the settlers of Utah. The homage was paid by William McCraw of Dallas, Tex., intern ational representative,of who cited the early history the region and then told of "that noble group of immigrants led by one of the most colorful and one of the strongest characters in history. They found a wilder, ness here, but bycolint of work and fortitude, they bunt an empire. Less than two per cent of the land is tillable and yet the state has grown to include many lovely communities and more than 600,000 people." Mr. McCraw, who was master of ceremonies, introduced other Variety officers, including Marc J. Wolf of Indianapolis, international chief barker, who presented the charter for Salt Lake Variety Tent 38 to Henry S. Ungerleider, chief barker for the local unit. Mr. Wolf said Variety is a charitable organization of show-peopwhich supports children's hospitals, clinics, milk banks, boys' ranches and youth --, , , ) i i' 1 x .,,,,,,.,;:. k ,-- -- 0 1,, .,,,.."..0.51,,S. r-NCI7.7. -:' . , ,,...c,,-- ,.. ,,,,;" 1 , 4 ' " , t :421- , ,) '1 ' - ' ' 1 '''---, ". , -- ' , ' , , , - ' '- - ; -' f . . .r. - - .: ' : ,...:, , ' . , i i, , . - ' ,, . .. - , - - '' - , ' ..f.o. . ..,.:, t - - ,,,j 5.--- . . . i - i ,., tv ' ' . g- , '.' MritRAY FUN - RIDES HIGHPolice Officer H. D. Turner takes his daughter, Della (right) and liorma Dec. GIs a ferris wheel spin as part of a Murray run ,Days ' frolic. - ' i .ii , , ,; l , ' ' ''''',.,.- - . '' ; n':., ff , 0 ' , - , ,.. ..., s '?"" ':' '' , ;' , ,,, lir Swedish-American- over- y ,. Set s flow crowds at Murray Fun for kiddies Days' carnival-lan- d marked the fourth day Thursday of civic festivities here. The hwho jamSalt Lek; City residents of the raMsummer .committee Is bemed theWy11;-,ttfore a free show Wednesday set Swedish ancestry will hold their slated for 5:30 p.m. A concert and dance Program the note. They overflowed into 50th annual midsummer festiVal wili begin at 7 p.m. in the Bow. the aisles. at afternoon Lagoon. ery. Greetings in Swedish will Long lines of youngsters Friday Sponsored by the Associated be extended by chairman Carl waited to board thrill rides. The long lines resulted as Murray Swedish Societies of Salt Lake Erik Johansson and an address merchants passed out more of City, the festival for the first will be made by Mayor Earl J. their 50,000 stockpile of carni- time will be open to the public. Glade. folk dances will inSwedish val ride tickets. Opening event on the program clude the schottische, versoThe tickets are going out to starts at 3:30 p.m. During the afternoon the pro- vienne. oxdans and tryksdalshoppers. The carnival fiesta for youngsters and store sales for gram will include deCoration of spolska. The program will contheir parents in Salt Lake a May pole, dances and races clude with the singing of the County's second largest city for children. A comical soccer Swedish and American national I game between 'lasts until Saturday. , N i girl's team and) anthems. ' , .. , , Lagoon Festival Friday. f7P--- '..''''; F Ix ..1,.1 - - , , ' ''H.1 - .r'i. i , 1,''''''"' ' 1 , . - ' - r e' - A- t.f.; ' MURRAYTurn-awa- t I' 1'; , '''- , , ' t , . , ,:' , , '. '; -- -- ,,, - , ) ) - - ,, , ' : '.....:"..":.!-1116.7.7..1c- '''' , , "À' :-- I ' .,P 0 I it - , , , - - -- , ' ,., , 1 .," ' 't :',,,, Murray Fun Fest , , - ,,,: ....::::,...;:::., ,, '1 ,,,,'...--:,1.'-- ,s,c , ''.,1- Kids Jam , it ,r, , . ,,,, ' . , !' ., , .( ;,.:L:. , 144.,' ! ,r - - , ,,,,-,;,,,,,- -- 1,41- 1- . .. , ,,,,, ,, , .' . ..,,,,-- . , k,, lip , 3 ',',: tt ''':' - : ,,,,,' ,: " , - ,- ,,,,;,,,,,,, TO S. L. I programs in 31 cities in the United States, in Canada and Mexico, and in London. He said that more than $3,000,000 was expended by Variety groups on local levels during 1949. Other international officers at the charter ceremony included Robert J. O'Donnell of Dallas, international ringmaster; C. E. Lewis, New York City, international press guy; Dave Bershon, Los Angeles, international representative, and Judge Ezra Stern of Los Angeles. The affair was attended by more than 300 motion picture exhibitors and distributors representatives and executives and their wives from more than 20 states. It was part of the three-da- y roundup of the movie industry in Salt Lake. Final event will be the victory dinner-danc- e Thursday evening at the Hotel Utah. C. Clare Woods, Shinl Thayne and Harry J. Swonson are in charge of the affair which is scheduled to be addressed by Gus P. Backman, executive secretary of the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce. Farmington Bills Apartment Owners PIFin S. L Confab ..........--..... NEWAND THE OLDErnest P. Ave, is one of the,oldest Swedish immigrants living in Utah! He has attended 45 Swedish TRUE TO THE of Bern-Stro- Bryan Festivals sponsored by the Salt Lake City Swedish Society' ivid will be at the 1950 gathering Friday at Lagoon. Here he 'examines the flag of his native land. , - An eight-ma- n committee of the Apartment House Association of Utah will meet with B. A. Weight, executive vice president, Friday at 9 cm. in Room 322, Ness Bldg., 'to complete plans for the national apartment house owners convention which will be held in Salt Lake City I Sept. 18, 19 and 20. , ' :1,' e. i I . r,,,, , - ::' ::. FARMINGTON A preliminary hearing for a man and wife charged with operating a "house of ill fame" will begin here at 10 a.m. Friday before Judge H. H. Robinson. William and Rosetta Davis were arrested June 10 along with five women in a police raid on the Benevolent Hand Friendship Club near here which had been incorporated only two days earlier. Mr. Davis has also been named in another complaint issued by Ogden police. He is one of four men arrested by vice squadsmert at the Key Club in Ogden on April 29. He is charged with operating a gambling device. Hearings for four women arrested at the "club", at Farmington along with Davis and his wife will be held later. They are charged with "soliciting for immoral purposes." Another woman is charged with selling liquor. Davis and the three men arrested on the gambling charge are free on $1000 bail. They were arrested by Detectives Lynn M. Garside and L. G. Bennett. They are: Johnny Estrada, 27, of 3860 Ogden Ave., Albert Lee, 60, of 2446 Grant Ave., and Millard Moore, 29, of 225 Twenty-fift- h St. All four will be arraigned late Thursday before the justice of the peace at Roy. - - NA), t .1:' , , :;':'-','- For Man, Wife , ii. 1 , ,,,,, ..,, t ,,1 ,:s., I ''",','S Morals Hearing - 9' ?4,..'''' , le "taiwkolskiaxs , ,,.. 4 i 4, 1 , ',, ....I., 4 k ''.. , , ',:::',;:.;;;: ,.f Showmen Pay Honor To Pioneers of Utah' ' Chest Scans Fund Requests I . ' ' Henry S. Ungerleider (right), chief barker. of Salt Lake's new Variety International Tent 38, receives charter from Marc J. Wolf (left) and Robert J. O'Donnell, international officers of the organization. , 1 - '1 , - , ,., ,,' .''' :::;:',,,:.1:,:,-,:::.- , $ ' - .: , ,':,27::' ) , - .. ?5, , , - it . I co, - , , -- 12-ye- ar - . 7t." ' , , ...::,',.,.,:: ' , ., . , , ,' 1 J ,:: l '''''s, d, J . s., ,:, 64 60 57 57 42 1,211 y .::':, 1 Noted Utah man Dies ?i:. I, :i- ( i, 10-m- ill . 10-ye- ar J.: , 8180,000 bond issue: Yes, 419; No, 151. For a new levy to raise 8750,000 in ten years: Yes, 454; No, 183. An official report on the voting will be Made when the Murray Board of Education meets at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Bids will belsked "soon" on a $500,000 senior- - high school plant. Board President Williard Olson said the grade schools will be erected after the high school is finished. , - 1. ' returns: For a , , itl..:r:: ,..x., ,4-i- ' Murray voters overwhelmingly balloted Wednesday to financially back school builda million-dolla- r ing program. Taxpayers face a 10 mill higher levy and a $180o000 bond issue during the next ten years. to one A ratio favored the new schools. of eligible Only one-thir- d voters balloted whether to okeh a school board plan to build a new senior high school and two grade schools within the next five years. Unofficial . - -- !1,,' , ' MURRAY 4' - ,,, ' . , : By Murray :1 - f al. School Bond Wins Okeh 4,' , ,,r-- ... .. ; 1 i I 1,,,.4 11 ,i, U. Si Shirts Texas-Louisia- 1,899 - -, Soviet School Program Inadequate, Speaker Says ' k ''1...':' N Pleasant . "!'y . 4' 't; r,,,. , I , e '.. ,,,,:21,4 -' ...k, Sunnyside in Carbon County advanced from 424 in 1940 to 1882 in 1950, a gain of 1458 or 344 per cent Orera, which had a population of 2914 in 1940, swelled to 8338 in 1950, a gain of 5424 or 1.86 per cent. This put Orem sixth in population in the state. Other cities showing leading population gains in the last decade were: Per cent 1950 1940 Gain City :, 40-- S ';','- 3484. ! ,: , es . .52. 'N");'' r , ., :.- Census Gain .,, , ' Layton, Sunyside and Orem led all Utah cities in percentage population gains in the last decade, a study of census-figurfor Utah showed Thursday. Layton ran away with the show by logging a population increase of 2838 or 439 per cent The city's 1940 population was 646;; and in 1950 reached ., ' . ,i ,, 3 , - Missionaries Dated For Farewell Honors :: tosi4.4r.-,e- l'':-::--,- , IIn d,' The body of a ,tv!..1t Salt Lake woman who had been ' t , t d missing from her home since 11 ' r; 5t ' a't, Feb. 24 was found Thursday ,4 ! , , t5i, Ale morning on a dirt ledge in the A' : 'A' ..'' unfinished basement of a home ':,: 11 ' e,... ,.,,t,teg.',,.' at 1109 West Second South St. , iv ,,N, , The woman, identified as Mrs. , I, Ur ' l'N-4-,it Bertha Neilsen, diter ,4 , Eleventh West S., apparently 1 A I t..!7, i , under the home ' I , - f,t1,.. had crawled '' q '''''' ''' '''' ' ''''4.' City plant shortly after her disappearance. i I --- : No foul play was suspected. Her f I yti ' ' . f husband, Peter A. Neilsen, said '''' , : ,;.z. .,' , ,, from wandered had she away g Ns s' ,:: , 0.4.7,...,1 home several times before. I:,: , 4 i,',--z 50.:;': , - l' ,, t ODOR - NOTICE , 4, t- , 1 , 40 was made The 1, discovery ':' ,4 ,..:'''' Cal17., when Mr. and Mrs. Thomas 4 Ij,..,,,,,,...,.,.,,.........,, Taylor, residents of the house, ,,,z-, reported to police that they no' ' ticed a strong odor in the house ot , i s, Louis-- C. and thought they could see some Midgley, F. William i Following the testimonial an .04..0 50. ' '' the in on back the William feet Wach, ledge Eugene Latimer, open house will be held at the al- , :.1 .,f s's ,4 I $ baserñert. Joseph Lyle Owens, F. Earl home of his parents, .,...c.......,, , Prior to his departure for the Officer Robert Crane of the Matheson and Wendell J. Dun- ..A. ,52...' ' ! i police radio patrol division can will be honored at testi- Eastern States Mission, Elder made the first investigation. monials during the romingl Owens. son of Mr. and Mrs. Jo, Then Detectives Ross Hunsaker week. They will seph A. Owens, 103 F St. will and Harold Clark were sent out SIONS for the Church of Jesus be honored at a testimonial. , Saints. The testimonial will be held and the three officers discovered Christ of Latter-da- y .. ., the Farewell testimonial for El- ., ' body. YEAR THE ROUND '4, :.""' de- der .. CRAWL TO LEDGE . ,, ' Iral'""P"74:41::I --the New Zealand 4 to E. E. Brazier, left, managing director, Utah Electrical Attendants from White Chap- parture '';,6 '., ' Association, , ' ; , '' el Mortuary, who were sum- Mission will be held in the presents Mrs. L R. Wiley and Miss Beth 4 Ward Bountiful Third chapel, O'Neal a gift of frozen food from the frozen foods school moned, had to crawl on their AS, , ,,, '1', stomachs on the dirt ledge to Fourth East and Fourth, North, at Uptown Theater'. t. , , , recover the body. The woman on June 25 to 5 p.m. , A son of Mr. and Mrs. Rushby 1,oso ,,;,. Rf was Identified by her wedding , formerC. of Bountiful of , ' 'to. , Midgley 41, ring and a camel's hair coat she ly of Salt Lake City, be was , was wearing. , .,-Mr. and Mrs. Taylor said they graduated froin East High 4 Univerand School attended the had been on vacation from Feb. two He of Utah for years. 3 until March 6, and -- the cold sity , k, weather since then probably had was a member of the varsity I AlTau debate squad, Elder Kappa Elder Owens Latimer them from prevented detecting k pha and Lambda Delta Sigma, odors earlier. any Sunday at 7 p.m. in the South , A temperature soared out-- packaging of frozen foods for Detectives said the woman honorary fraternities. Twentieth Ward chapel, 107 G the freezer. Assisting was Miss undoubtedly died of natural . iside, snort than 325 Salt Lake St. 14"," - "11911, . housewives , found , It Edsstut Peterson. Frfor Vclosing causes and that no autopsy 4114' , Speakers at the testimonial City ..,-- f cm., would be held because of the .,,v, will include William E. Stoker ,' 1 ' MillUe ill: ' -LIV11.11Ing 1 wIU: include - a- demonstration condition of the body. ,, ' ' - , , and Nayman S. Buckmiller. z , they learned more about frozen on preparation- and cooking .' 1 :.:7"t ,4 Elder Matheson will serve in foods at the Uptown Theater. , foods from the freezer, witp ow' : His testi; , They were attending the set-en- d Mrs. Vilate White supervising. .,,,,,,tio,,,,1 ...... monial will be held Friday at diE. E., A Brazier, managing day of the frozen foods , , 8:15 p.m. in the Twenty-nint- h ..,.., , , -- Ward chapel, Third North and school conducted by the Utah rector otthe sponsoring associ.. 11'):' , -- - ,,, ,....... with ation, stamped the school so 1 Tenth West Streets. Association, 'I A - 4 Electrical ' 'demonstrations by experti from lar as a distinct success with 'r,..,..tt Elder Matheson is a son of , I -- ' 4 , the Utah Power and Light tom- President and Mrs. John B. . . . pany home economics departfie said all distributors of Matheson. President Matheson frozen foods equipment were I I ment ., . Elder Wach is head of the East Central Elder Midgley States Mission. His Salt Lake superrepresented at the school and session, Thursday's vised by Miss tallies D. Lund, have on exhibit in the foyer , . Principal speaker will be home is at 350 North Eleventh The Manti Armory Annex Bishop Claron O. Spencer. An West St -featured the preparation and their latest freezers. . .,,., , , probably will be leased by its open house will follow the testipresent renter as a factory to monial. make 250,000 shirts for the Air Elder Wach will be honored or .. , - ,' Force.. at testimonial June a farewell , .' ' . ' , , , '' , This possibility was being dis- 25 at 7 p.m. in the Hunter Ward cussed in Salt Lake City Thurser chapel prior to his departure to at. DIE, Mission. the day by J. A. Theobald, ' , ' head of the Publicity and IndusA son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred k. a;0' ,,';', Wach trial of and Elder Wach of : Russia- & making a bid for to America's children in trades Utah, Department I, Hunter, Edward C. Carlisle, Salt Lake graduated from Cyprus High , 41"k.,14".. higher education, but she has from one to eight," Dr. Champ- City clothing manufacturer. School where he was active in U ' stated-Unt. il If the buildingerected dur- football and track. He has fin,,,,.-- a long way to go before her lin the beginning of World ing World War I as a parachute ished his second year at the 1 , school system will be camper. to Mr. Car- University of Utah. - , United War II, Russia's national school factoryis leased '.' able to that of the . Testimonial for Elder Latimer Elder Matheson Elder Duncan lisle, it will mean that 150 per, States. program was about a sona in the lianti area will have will be held Sunday at 610 p.m. t Those conclusdons were drawn Proltnun. Russia does have steady employment until March in the Harvard Ward A graduate of West High chapel, Thursday by Dr. Carrot D. f many universities and hundreds 1. 1951. i 1036 Second East St. Elder School, Elder Matheson has atMr. Carlisle and Mr. Theo-bal- Latimer will serve in the North- tended the University of Utah Mi Champlin, speaker at the lunch of technical schools, the speaker , who at present is manager ern States Mission. meeting during the Educational pointed out, but their standards for the past two years. Admhlistrators' Conference at are very much lower than those of the Utah State ,rair AssociaFarewell for Elder Duncan Son of Mr. and Mrs. John ste recognize as being minimum tion, began a preliminary dis- Latimer, 168 Hampton Ave. El- will be held Sunday at 5:30 p.m. ' the 'University' at:Utah. cussion of terms Thursday at der Latimer is a second-yea- r ; Dr. Champlin is a member-- of objectives. in the Union Second Ward chapthe University of Utah Summer Dr. Paul Tilher, principal of the Capitol preparatory to a student at the University of el, 7200 Ninth East St. A 1948 graduate of Roosevelt Session faculty and is visiting Los Angeles High School, and meeting later this month with Utah. here from - Pennsylvania State Joseph D. Jenkins, president of th..a.B. ard....45f Cc!ntr.. of the Utah High School, Duehesne County, owns met Elder Duncan attended Nenager College: Phi Delta Kappa, national pro;- National Guard, which Business College in Salt Lake fessional educational fraternity, building. .situssia now has a Mr. Theobald was asked to City for the past two years. ,,,:' h- school program which is sup- were speakers at other Thursthe discussion by Gov. J. begin ' While residing in Salt Lake City rt.. pro- day sessions. posed to equal our at Lee because the Bracken ,: he has been living with his gram, but which actually corn-par- ' This continues through Sa'ur" time the annex was built he was .Z4'. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. I to the education offered day. PM funds head of the , Thomas Smith. to build it. used were c at 111.11testimock, nial -- "' t-SALINA, Sevier County Mr. Carlisle has had a lease ."----7 SPZalcr . Pr'rf re' , , a school Utah 'el-,.., ' on the building since Nov. 23, Stena Scorup, 68, '",77 1 "., ' and Grant Burson. ''' ti'4'17 t I 1949. This lease runs out July teacher 43 years and first Mecham, 1 4 1 4 l. d'.- ' died in woman Ia. 1. c 1 Utah, ; mayor 1 , i440 C : I1 , T 4.0.4 Be already has been awarded Thursday at 2:15 a.m. at her , . , ,, .,- , contract , for the home here. after a lingering illthe government ,,,,,,p ,,,.. i , ''' ' " ' ' '' shirts and if the building is re- ness. ','"c. r I leased to bim, he will put $10,- Miss Scorup was , widely ' 000 worth of new machinery known in the field of education. , : : ..- ,1 it. Miss Storup was active in the '" 4 1 '' ' ' '' into ; .. has The 42,000 building Church of Jesus Christ of Latter'. , 1 . Review of fund requests by r, , I 1,10 ... ,,, , square feet of floor space. It -day Saints, having filifitled 21 Red Feather Agencies for '''' kit , it . 1 7f ' cost $150.000. :', a mission in the northern states 1951 opened Thursday before ' l'N, t ., 1,,. 4 from 1911 to 1912. She was the budget committee of the i. , f sf. ' .. . i president of the Young Ladies' Salt Lake County Community 1, , '1r 4.. OVERFLOWING . Mutual Improvement Associa- Chest at headquarters at 112 r si, ,...,,..,f, t-,. ---. tion in l years. South State St 1 , it i Salinsurvived I ; , ii She 4' one i by Requests totaling $312,751.08 .1 04 .,..:,.. , .,.. ' , I two sister: J. A. compared with requests of brother and ' ,ASt 10., ? ,' .. , ScoruP, Moab; Mrs. Olevia $307,654.47 for 1950 have been Thornell, lad Mrs. Alvida An- submitted to the committee which now will attempt to pare derson, both of Salina. . ' tC,,',', . ..,..4 t ,r 1.., v A' : Funeral services will be con- the requests as closely as pos, . ,,i , ducted Sunday at 2 p.m. in the sible in order to set a goal for 1 ' 1 Salina Second Ward chapel. ". .' the 1951 fund campaign. - l''........tamilth' Pa' ' ' A. ' ' ,..: ,.......... )I C :. c; S. " ' , ..ril , ., . , - ' '' , Woman's Body LEASE SIGNING ASSURES Layton Leads S. L. CLAY PROCESS PLANT Utah Cities Found in .,... ;,:.;:ii,vi,,-,,:,t,:-.- 1- , Joi ,:, .. !,.. ,., itine ,2Z, 1950 .,,,,..,.... t,:,.c,,x,,,,,. ' z .. NEWS, Thursday, ,, 7.- - , . ...............,,....., ; ! ,., i - I0A-;-.1)ESER- ,,, - - . -. . , , NIENIMMININIMINIMENIMMOINIMINIMMINIMISEENIMINEOMMINOMMINIMMEIMOINIMINIMEMEMIEMIlleignienlIUMEMIllibileaisamimmemi, |