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Show THE CITIZEN 23 i)iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiBtiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiie: Country Club Set for Opening marks the fifth annual openLake Country Club. A ly 0f ethe Salt will be enjoyed this From now on throughout the geason the Club will be the scene of It will be the mach social activity. favored spot for many luncheons' and afternoon bridge parties because ol Today eve-pin- g. dinner-danc- inviting coolness. When the Club opened five years ago it was pronounced by critics, who visited it, to be one of the sportiest lf courses in the entire country; it its ranked fourth in America then. Many improvements have since been made go it should now be nearer the head of the list. Indications are that the 1928 season gill be the biggest in its history. A very successful membership drive has completed, resulting in the clubs obtaining its full quota of 400 members. More enthusiasm is being shown than at any previous time. Many interesting tournaments are already booked quite a long list in fact. It is believed the mens tournaments will be much more successful this year than ever before. Tuesday has been designated as Ladies Day throughout the season. A good game of golf is the best tonic for the tired business man. The cares and worries of the workaday world are soon forgotten. As soon as your feet touch the velvety turf at the Club and you feel that pungent, bracing canyon air, you are bouyant, exhilerated and ready for anything that comes. There is an allurement in golf found in no other game, probably due to the fact that it takes one jost been out of the open spaces, among the rolling hills, into an atmosphere of quietness and peace. Following is a list of officers, directors and committees for the ensuing year. President: Allan G. Randall. Curtis B. Hawley. Botterill. Frank Secretary: Treasurer: George B. Thomas. Directors: Curtis B. Hawley, Geo. B. Thomas, Joy H. Johnson, Frank Botterill, George H. Parrish, Athol Rawlins, Allen G. Randall, Charles D. Smith, John M. Wallace. Allen G. Executive Committee: Randall, chairman; Curtis B. Hawley, Joy H. Johnson, Geo. B. Thomas, Frank Botterill. House Committee: George H. Parrish, chairman; Mrs. Joel Nibley, Mrs. C. A. Shay, Charles D. Smith, W. R. Vice-Preside- vice-chairma- nt: n; Pollock. Greens Committee: John C. Deal, chairman; Bartlett Wicks, L. K. Wasson. W. Bert Robinson, Got-tscha- Geo. ll, F. Committee: John M. Wallace, chairman; Robert B. Ritchie, Dr. C. J. Pearsall. Tennis Committee: - Charles D. Smith, chairman; J. R. Walker, Jr., Mrs. George H. Smith. Delegates to Utah State Golf Association meetings: Allen G. Randall, W. T. Benson, Dr. E. W. Browning, John C. Deal. Surely those who selected the Club site at the foot of Parleys Canyon were men of vision. It would be hard to find a more picturesque spot. The beautiful club house, with its spacious verandas and enticing easy chairs ever invites genial companionship. The canyon breezes greet you as soon as you reach the hill, and you experience a sense of freedom on that great open expanse that you never feel in Membership the city. In the distance lies the gleaming lake, shimmering in' the sun. The city with its thousands of trees looks like on huge garden. At night its countless myriad lights glimmer like stars in the darkness. Whether you go out to the links in the cool silence of the early dawn or at the setting of the sun a picture of marvelous beauty lies before you in every direction. 1 Beautiful I Highland Park I Joining the Country Club on the south and a making an ideal home- - 1 site for those in quest of a dty place in the country. Close to school, ? in half acre lots suit- able for garden and g . EDUCATION IN UTAH (Continued from Page 11.) and the state as a whole. The movement in education should be the compulsory education of the alien and the illiterate. Every citizen of the United States should be compelled to have a fairly good understanding of the English language. Utah realizes the necessity of higher education. The girl or boy who goes out into the world to make a living is sorely handicapped without an education. The following are statistics published by the Federal Bureau of Education. chicken raising. Salt Lakes next-forwar- Untrained people earn from $400 to $1200 a year in this country. Those with common school training range from $600 to $1500 a year. Those with a high school education from $850 to $2450 on an average. Those who have attended college get from $1400 to $5000 while college graduates average income is $6,000 a Fastest Growing I Sub-Divisi- on And justly so, because those of moderate means are realizing the advisability of buying half acre lots in High- land Park, more and more each day, until at this time this beautiful subdivision takes on the appearance of Salt a Lake Citys most thriv- - ; ing district. s s 1 Gardens s ; year. From the beginning up until the present time, education has been of paramount importance in Utah. I j Nothing brings out the zest for the days work more than a lit-tie tilling each day in the garden, and in Park Highland finds the ideal such activities. one spot for a S 5 5 S 1 Chickens I There is good money in raising chickens, and there is plenty of room for from 500 to 1000 chickens. I Make your- - a self independent while holding your position in " town. Fresh Air Lots of room to breath, and what wonderful air, far away from the grime and soot, close to the foothills, just the sort of air one would expect to breathe in the Garden of Eden. i Close In Only thirty minutes from the center of town, away from the roar of traffic, and fine roads all the way. ? For further .information call or write to THE BAUtD CO. 61 West South Temple i m A bird's-ey- e view of the Country Club. Street, Wasatch 3170 as mm ITlllllliliiliiliilliliiliiliiliillillillllilllllliliiliillllillilliilliliili: |