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Show The National Enterprise, June 22, 1977 Page five More Salt Lake malls planned Four new shopping complexes planned in the Salt Lake Valley. are being attract customers. would both local and out-of-sta- te The most recent addition to the Salt Lake Citys retail centers is the Brewery Mall, to be located at 200 So. 1 100 West. Featuring shops that will operate from within old Lucky Lager beer tanks, the mall is being planned by Leland and Also targeted for construction is a S990.000 addition to Olympus Hills Shopping Center on Wasatch Boulevard. The Hole in the Wall Mall" will provide nearly 27,000 square feet of floor space for 30 shops. It will be three years before the complex is complete, but we expect the first phase to be open by August," said M. Ingersoll. has also budgeted $2.1 million for remodeling, with a new facade planned for the centers main section. The plans have been approved by the Salt Lake County Planning Melvin Ingersoll. Anticipating a $1 million expenditure to renovate the old Fisher-Luck- y Lager brewery, the Ingersolls plan for restaurants, a movie theater, bank, food storage business, department store, and furniture and sporting goods stores to be housed in the 300,000 square-foc- i M. Ingersoll said several shop complex. spaces have already been leased, adding, "Many, many people are pulling the rope hoping to get a space in the complex." The developers plan parking capacity of 1,000 vehicles and Ingersoll speculated the mall Olympus Commission. commissioners are still considering a annexation near 1300 East and 3000 site of the old Interstate Brickyard. South, Developer Brent Dyer hopes to annex the property to the city and begin construction of a $25 million shopping mall, 300 condominiums and other projects. Debate over approval of the annexation stems from Dyers request for the city to run water lines to the propertys border and to enclose a nearby sewage canal. City 55-ac- re Telecommunications firm plans to rival Ma Bell to the north and south Business Communications installing a $100,000 phone system. The Ogden office is planned for 550 24th St., near the Ogden Clinic, where BCS is installing a $95,000 system. A Pocatello site has not been selected. Brown plans to hire six installers to staff the new Systems, Inc., a telecommunications company which has been trying to sink its teeth into Mountain Bells Salt Lake City telephone equipment market for seven years, is broadening its bite to three more cities this month. offices. Branches of BCS are planned in Provo, Ogden and Poca- We want to provide fast, local service to a larger area," Brown said, "and expansion is warranted. Last year we doubled our business and sold 51 million in equipment." tello, according to Brent Brown, corporation president. The Provo office will initially be headquartered Utah Valley Hospital, where BCS is at Bank News First Security Bank of Utah and Zion's First National Bank could be facing competition in Roosevelt should two new banking applications be approved. Walker Bank and Trust has applied for a Roosevelt branch bank, and Overland Thrift and Loan hopes to establish an industrial loan corporation in the town. Ipson is organizer for Overland, having earlier established the St. George Thrift and Loan Corp. in St. George. Ipson, Vcrn K. Bliss and JoAnn B. Ipson would be primary officers in the new bank. Don L. Both applicants cited Roosevelts growth as jusitification for their applications to the Utah Department of Financial Institutions, saying the population had multiplied by more than 121 percent between 1970 and 1974. In addition, they estimated the gross taxable sales in Duchesne County rose 300 percent between 1970 and 1976. Hearings have not been scheduled for either application. ScoBra TravelX Domestic and International Airline Ticketing, Hotel Reservations, Rental Car Reservations, Airline ReserOcean Travel Arrangements. vations, AT ABSOLUTELY NO ADDITIONAL ALL OF THIS It does not cost you one COST TO YOU. That's right! cent more to utilize the services of ScoBra Travel over going directly to the Carrier. WHY NOT USE THE THE COMPANY THAT PERFORMS FOR YOU Bus-Rail-a- nd 1 1 - CUSTOMER!! Ask our advertisers: We wanted results from our advertising and that meant reaching only prime prospects with the dollars we spent. And we didnt want our ad lost in a daily. The Enterprise was the answer. What really sold me, though, was the results we got. Our advertising contract with The Enterprise is one of the best things weve done. The inquiries weve gotten greatly exceeded our projections." Dick Shipman Recre-Airln- c. Advertising in the Enterprise works. A TRAVEL AGENCY OF PROFESSIONALS -FOR PROFESSIONALS 455 S. 300 East 100 6 (801) 355-681- |