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Show Club 39 and Restaurant Minoa Purchased by Salt Lake Men SAN FRANCISCO and LOS ANGELES Sunday thru Friday Next morning delivery in-bou- nd and John Short and Associates, a private partnership between Short and Glen C. Anderson, both of Salt Lake City, has purchased the Fox and Horn Restaurant, (formerly Club 39) and the Restaurant Minoa, 1140 East 3900 South, for- - an undisclosed sum. The 20,000 square foot restaurant and private club opened last Monday. Former owner (Club 39) was Nick Nickols, Salt Lake. General manager Michael McCabe said the partnership purchased the existing business of Club 39 and will lease the building and property from owner Rex Nowell. McCabe declined to disclose the conditions of the lease agreement. Included e in the agreement are over lease-purchas- out-boun- d! Adeiphic CargoExecutive Enterprises Salt Lake International Terminal Airport, (801) 533-081- three acres of property and a 500-ca- r parking lot. The private Psychiatrist Club will club and the operate as a Restaurant Minoa as a public restaurant. McCabe will manage both operations. Since the purchase of the business. Short and Associates has spent about $50,000 renovating kitchen and bar facilities. The club held its grand opening the night of Dec. 27. Commercial Security Bank, Salt Lake, arranged financing, McCabe said. Property is leased through ASCO, Inc., a private corporation, John Short, president; Michael McCabe, vice president; Peter Coombs, secretary; and Glen Anderson, treasurer. 8 There will be cake overstocked inventory of frozen cakes at the Pep- - SUPERVISION AND QUALITY EMPLOYEES MAKE THE DIFFERENCE! TRI-LEV- EL COMPLETE JANITORIAL SERVICE - WINDOW CLEANING o ONE TIME CLEAN-UP- S WALL WASHING CARPET CLEANING AA0 7JU club-restaura- nt Expectations of Poor Year Leads to Pepperidge Farm Layoff of 100 aplenty in Cache Valley. An u non-prof- it Pepperidge Farm, Inc., Norwalk, Pa., is a wholly owned subsidiary of Cambell Soup Co., Canden, New Jersey. Pepperidge Farm president Gordon McGovern said the layoff last Friday was the result of corporate speculation that 1977 would be a slow year. He said the 107 employees laid off wrould return to work only as normal Emturnovers occurred. Utah for the ployment plant was reduced from over 400 to about 300 people," he said, and employment at the plant will not exceed 300 in The Richmond plant is one of nine Pepperidge Farm production and distribution plants in the U.S. From its Cache Valley location, the plant sells frozen cakes, cookies and crackers to wholesale distributers in western states. FACTORIES 11 Via a telephone interview from his Norwalk office, McGovern said corporate DEALERSHIPS STORES BANKS Since 1958 3532 So. West Temple inventory. 1977." FLOOR STRIPPING RESTROOM SERVICE YARD CARE OFFICE BUILDINGS !: peridge Farm plant in Richmond, Ut. has led to the layoff of over 100 cake makers in an effort to reduce concensus was that many luxury food items would be cut from the average Americans household budget. He said that cake sales showed only modest gains" in 1976 and that the company expects cake sales to drop in 1977. We are not overly optimistic about the economy in 1977. We look for a general slowdown and think cake is one thing consumers may find they can do without." McGovern said he could not single out any particular economic factor that might lead the economy back into recession, but he did say increased government spending under a new administration was of great concern to the company. The layoff is the fourth employment reduction in the history of Pepperidge Farm. |