OCR Text |
Show iirL'Hiiiyiyffllii rH' Biiyb'tyaTTsay $ t flornn-frir-- mnmk n mo liiiij0iiiiiipii y ny argmffiuir ww IFirm r' By PATRICIA C. SULLY Deseret News Correspondent A new company locate in Pleasant Grove, where it plans to line a minimum of 50 men manufnrlur.ng window and door frames and cabinets, officials annoum ed today. & f will civic The company is King Window Co., now located in Canton, Ohio and in New' Yoik State, said Pleasant Grove Mayor Paul D. Fordham. Mayor Fordlium, Max C. Klliott, president of Utah Valley Industrial Association, and Richard Benson, UVIDA manager, mt with Gov. Calvin L. Rampton this afternoon to make the announcement. The company will begin its operations as soon as facilities are available, Mr. Ford-ha- said. He said that the City of Grove Tlea.sant and the 4 Z t t I V f i r I 'A V' s '? V h!' i I- v L, i , S'V '' fj t ' vv T ' "2, , Chamber of Commerce this week purchased the old Pleas-anGrove Cannery at a price of $00,000 for a new industrial d park. The King Window firm will be located in this new park in a building which will be built by the city, he said. Bids will be advertised soon for the building, he added. Financing of the project will be through revenue bonds, with the rental on th. building providing funds to retire the bonds. This will mean no new a J ; Friday, 4 October 11, Since the frames are made of ponderosa pine, the corny y needed a location close to Idaho and Washington sources material. Some wood will also come from Utah forests. 1968 of raw taxation for the citys residents, he emphasized. The industrial paik site contains 13 acres of ground with three well. It has access to rail lines, water and other Utilities. Mayor Fordham said the concity had an eight-yeatract with the King firm, with r renewable options. Present plans call for a minimum of 20,000 square feet of manufacturing space, with the possibility that this will double within a year. The company Richard King. United Air Lires will inaugurate new nonstop jet freighter service between Salt Lake City and Chicago Oct. 27, said J. R.j Dunlap, sales manager. The Boeing 727 Jet freighter! will operate every weekday, leaving Salt Lake City at 1:15 a.m. and arriving in Chicago at 4:33 a.m., he said. The freighter will also give direct service oa to Buffalo and Newark. Westbound is headed by flights will orig- .er i v sv v-'- $ I I-- I , H i ( . tuts ; -- I M V u L ' UTC-Tf T; , Cl .FM u W ) x- - J jiifniiiW Manager five-yea- t inate in Detroit to Chicago, leaving Chicago at 1 :50 a m. the and arriving here at 4 a.m., Mayor Fordham said city would be searching for then proceeding on to San Franother tenants to occupy sites in cisco, where it will arrive at the new industrial park. For 5:52. the present, the city will use other buildings on the grounds H for housing its own equipment. The center section of the Stephen f. Wiscombe has cannery will be torn down. been promoted to zone man-- j Other buildings, which are of ager of International Harvest-- i newer construction, will er Co's Mapleton farm equip-- I remain. ment zone. r .ivNi ' Freightline The compai y made its first contact with 'he state through the Utah bid mtrial Promotion Board, and said its expansion was dictated by the need to Coast the West service market, ; S.L.-Chica- go j ihimiilOtVi Getting word on jobs at fair are Nick Gilbert and Robert Grames. First Job Fair Satisfies The Would-B- e Employes Employers, job seekers and sponsors all expressed satisfaction with the first Job Fair held in the Salt Lake area. I've already received two leads on jobs," said Roger Jaensch, 932 Gold Place, who recently completed machinist training at Utah Technical College. He filled out an application at the Kennecott Copper Corp. booth and was told that job prospects were good by an employment counselor. 4 "v v :; ; v:' ret v, At'i :v 9 ' v Vs 1 Nick Gilbert, 17, 1791 W. 6th North, and Robert Grames, 17, Ave., seniors at West High School, said that they had been invited by a department store personnel manager to check for job openings later in the month. 557-6t- h Heres Exactly What Liquor Petition $:A Says (and vhat it means): 32-9-3- 2. It shall be unlawful for any person to corsume any alcoholic beverages on any licensed premises not sold or dispensed by the licensee or for any person to consume liquor in any portion of a hotel, restaurant, stadium, arena or other building which is open to the public except liquor sold or dispensed by a licensee. Nothing in this section shall prohibit cLe consumption of light beer from a package or bottle or apply to the portion of a building which is not generally accessible to the public, such as a private office, lodging room or a residence. 3 says you cannot pour a drink from your own ?' bottle AND that you MUST buy drinks from the :h h bar on icensed premises. i: I ! NEW YOR K(AP) Corp. of America It also says you cannot consume liquor in any public f ' place that is not licensed. Jf sell or A X This would U d. tv ft y Ot t. V. . tv put an end to If approved, St. Regis would become a wholly owned subsidiary of RCA. It would continue to function as a separate entity, however, with its present personnel and management and its own board of directors. The transaction would involve the exchange for each the oximately 13,700,000 shares of St. Regis common stock of share of RCA common and .425 of a of appr share of vertible $4 cumulative stock RCA to con- be issued. At Western Beginning today ticket buyers at the Western Air Lines reservation center in Salt Lake City received service with the inauguration of the new Accu-Re- s reservations system. A keyboard and television-lik- e screen connected with the line's central computer at Los Angeles facilitated instantaneous transmission and reception of reservation information. Flight schedules and passenger records show up on the screen when called for via the keyboard Company officials called the new system a major step in personalizing and speeding up customer services. ultra-moder- n i, .V. announced agreement in principle to merge. Accu-Re- s T 7 Regis Paper Friday The agreement is subject to approval of the directors of botn companies. Definite terms will be submitted to shareholders at a laier date. athletic , social , fraternal, etc. clubs from dispensing liquor from members bottles as they do now. I: dispense liquor by the package or bottle or to store on the licensed premises packages or bottles of liquor belonging to a person other than the licensee. Radio St. guson. J This section prohibits It shall be unlawful for any licensee to -and announcement was The made by RCA president Robert W. Sarnoff and St. Regis board chairman Roy K. Fer- merely chat. 3. RCA , Paper Firm Join I ;? i. which was held at the National Guard Armory, 1523 Sunnyside Ave. The fair wa sponsored by the Salt Lake Area Chamber of Commerce and the Salt Lake Metropolitan Cooperative Afea Manpower Planning Service (CAMPS). Larrv K. Wardle, CAMPS executive secretary, said he was well satisfied with the employer response. CORNER ON COMMERCE A. X- - S Job seekers and employers met at booths, displays during Salt Lake area Job Fair, lhursday. This The present system by which you can order setups and use your own would be completely abolished. And this applies EVERYliquor WHERE outside your residence, lodging room or office. No longer could you order setups at ANY social, athletic, veterans or fraternal and use your own liquor. No longer could you order setups and club use your own liquor in ANY public place where you dine or dance or 32-9-3- Were checking on possibilities for career work we can go into when we get out of school or something we can do while we go to college, they said. Older persons also were successful in landing jobs at the fair. Mrs. Margaret Seedorf, district manager for Field Enterprises Educational Corp., said that she had hired a managsales representative in the er and a part-tim- e first two hours that the fiar was open. It's a great idea. I hope it sets a precedent for otheis to follow, said Mrs. Evelyn Edwards, personnel manager for Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Utah. She and Ralph D. Bassett, systems analyst, data processing, said that they were not attempting to do any hiring but were giving out information on employment opportunities in their company. Forty employers representing a cross section of state and federal government and private industry were represented at the fair Construction Off During August Building construction during August in Utah was down from August 1967 by six per cent in nonresidential and 30 per cent in residential categories. This was the report of the W. Dodge Division of McGraw-Hil- l Information Sys- F. tems Co. today. However, a 74 per cent upsurge in nonbuilding construction from a year ago made the 1968 total of $34,082,000 a plus 11 per cent over August 1967 total construction. This year to date, total con siruction, at $182,125,000, is six per cent less than for (he same period a year ago. At $74,979,000, nonresidential is It per rent less; residential is $53,653,000, or two per cent less; nonbuilding is $53,483,000 or two per cent less. ,7 the present system of ordering setups and using personal liquor. i :.y?.7 far more. If passes, everyone who drinks will pay more prices in other states are any indication, drinks would cost from 75C to $ 1 .25 for one ounce. Figure it out for yourself! A fifth" contains about 25 ounces. Twenty-fiv- e If the bill Wow theres a new way to jet nonstop to Los Angeles. drinks at $1 each (including tips and tax) would total when a person $25. Compare that with what it costs in Utah today uses his own bottle and orders setups. one-ounc- e Count the Costs... Vote Against Xl Liquor Petition (Pfiid advertisement by Cicizeas fora Better Utah through Opposing tinuor-by-'Jie-- A loir, Richard A. Van Winkle, chairman.) AlrWestJets every day at 8:00 a.m. 12:55 p.m.5:10 p.m. Call Air West or your Travel Agent. |