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Show The Park Record SatySun/Mon/Tues, July 30-August 2, 2005 A-9 FROM TIME TO TIME Choices! Big production company to perform at Dewey Cojnpiled by KAT JAMES Ofifhe Record staff 50 Years Ago Jentzsch told Tfw Record this week that he hasnt received any phone calls complaining about the absence of the Whistle, and Mr. Jentzsch added that the only people asking questions concerning the Whistle arc "the newspapers." But Mayor Jack Green assured The Record that an effort would be made to solve the problem. "I'm going to call Ted Richards (a local electrician) and see if he can give us any information on it," Mayor Green said Wednesday. "This is something I can't believe." The Mayor added that in the past, whenever the Whistle went off too early or too late, a call would be made to Coalville and the problem would be corrected. But he said that apparently the problem with the Whistle is not in Coalville. After a certain amount of speculation on the part of a number of local residents, the general consensus seems to be that there is some sort of electrical problem. Former City Manager Wayne Matthews told The Record he thinks the problem is located somewhere between the clock located in the City Hall shed on Main Street and the siren at the top of City Hall. He speculated it is an electrical foul-up. Mayor Green said the Ten O'clock Whistle silence could be attributed to a malfunction in the telephone lines, not in the electrical wires. And there was speculation, given by a long-time Park City resident:Maybe someone wants to get rid of the Ten O'Clock Whistle. Mayor Green said he was not aware of any such idea. The Ten O'Clock Whistle has been in Park City for many years. Originally, the Whistle would notify local residents that miners had surfaced safely from the local mines. Later, the Whistle took on another meaning, that of a curfew for children. Now that Park City is no longer the thriving mining community it once was, and children no longer adhere to a 10 o'clock bedtime, the Whistle is simply considered a Park City tradition, one that has been curiously missing for about a month. •"I remember" by the Oldtfaneu From Mrs. John B. Amon, Greenville, Pa.: I remember the i "horse and buggy days"' - the dust •Anmscmads rose in a thin, yellow cloud from JVhat promises lo be a most suc- around the horses hoofs and settled cessful theatrical engagement both on everything far and near. The from an artistic and financial stand- buggy, out clothing, even the horses' point, will be the appearance at the back bore the gritty mask. We tasted Dcjvey Theatre next Tuesday and it in out mouths. Us smell entered Wednesday of the celebrated our nostrils to mingle with the Utahna Stock Company supporting sweetness of red and white clover. the; talented actress. Miss Victory We plodded slowly along in the Baleman. It needs only the mention heat of the summer day and as we of Oils gifted actress' name lo ensure went we gathered in all the sights, the^ public a series of first-class pro- sounds and smells of the country. ductions. Miss Baleman will be No bird flew over that was not remembered as the leading lady of commented upon. We smclled wild the old famous Grand Slock strawberries and stopped to see if Company in Salt Lake City, Ward they were ripe, and there, in the corand James Company and many of ner of an old rail fence, we gathered the1 leading stock companies of a bouquet of pink wild roses. America. Other members of the We jogged quietly along - lookcompany of some note are Mr. CJco. ing at farmhouses, gardens, men H. Melford. E.A. Martin, Max working in fields, hens wallowing in Hodge, O.F. Jonasson, Miss the dust. When we came lo Gertrude Sylvester, Miss Helen Waterloo, instead of driving over the Beane and many others. The com- bridge, we went down the gently pany will play the well-known suc- sloping bank into Eagle Creek, cesses. Tuesday night will feature the where the horse gets a long, cool great Southern drama, "The New drink and holds his nose in the water Dominion," made famous by Clay long after he is through drinking, Clement, and on Wednesday night, being under the impression that he is Marie Corcllis beautiful play of fooling us. Norwegian life, "Thclma." Special What a wonderful experience for scenery and electrical effects are carried for each and every production. a child to sit in a buggy in the middle of a stream and watch the ripples Summer prices prevail. widen and recede into infinity... To see the underside of a bridge and lit•State news Greeks are becoming so numer- tle fish swimming and a bird bathing. ous in Salt Lake that the cornerOnly four miles in the time it now stone of a Greek church has been takes to go 40 at a moderate speed, laid, and a school and hospital are but what sounds and impressions planned. were packed into those miles. What While cleaning furniture in her unforgettable memories now that home in American fork. Mrs. Harry water has gone under the bridge Drouse got some of the polish into a indeed, and summer and childhood slight cut on her hand and is suffer- and the old horse and buggy have ing from a bad case of blood poi- gone down some long, dusty road forever. soning. Eighteen-year-old Walter Hansen of Manti undertook to swim in a deep hole at a pleasure resort near his home on Sunday last without having first learned how. •Whhfle still sDent 'Hie Ten O'clock Whistle on Funeral services were held Main Street has now entered its Wednesday. The Salt Lake police made a raid fourth week of silence and the reaon the notorious American House son why the Whistle is not working on Commercial Street and arrested remains a mystery to local officials. there an ex-convict named John But the fact of the matter is, as of •Poles mest burgbn at Sflrer Kfeg Masters and a girl who gave her Wednesday of this week, no concert- HoCd by Brim Flyer name as Mabel Brown and claimed ed effort has been made to correct Recent statistics £p£Lthe Park Logan as her home, on a criminal the Whistle problem. Acting City Manager RTC • City Police Department showed that charge. 100 Years Ago 25 Years Ago 10 Years Ago crimes against property have dropped since 1992 and on July 17, officers John Lefavor and Marty Howard helped ensure those numbers continue to decline. The two officers arrested an individual staying at the Silver King Hotel after she allegedly robbed at least two Park City homes, one hotel room and was in possession of a controlled substance. Office Lefavor said police were called after a Silver King employee noticed a woman coming out of an administrative room at the hotel that was not open to the public. The employee told police she went into the room lo see if anything was wrong and found the some hotel keys, money and other items were missing from her day planner. At about the same time, another hotel employee had gone into the room occupied by the suspects to check for a leak in the hot tub. The employee told police that while he was in the room he noticed what he believed was marijuana and a smoking pipe. "We got a call from a maintenance worker at the Silver King who said he had seen the female leave the area," said Lefavor. "He had followed her to an address on Woodside. He contracted her there and told her to come back lo the hotel because he knew we would want to talk to her." The employee went back to the Woodside address after escorting the female back to the hotel to see if she had left anything there. "In one of the garbage cans of the condos she was at he found the suspect's purse with her I.D. in it," said Lefavor. "He also found some credit cards that belonged to an employee of the hotel, the ring of hotel keys and some other evidence we weren't sure was stolen until we contacted the owners of the property. "When we went up to the room we found quite a bit of stoJen property," said Lefavor. "There were some checks and credit cards that had been taken from a house on Park Avenue." Lefavor said he also found a pistol that had been stolen from another residence. Lefavor said the female was booked on several burglary charges and charged with possession of a controlled substance. 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