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Show Garbalizer demonstrates shredder Garbalizer Corporation of American sponsored a demonstration of its massive tire shredder for local machines yet. Brewer said, but the company is currently negotiating with a firm that could take several of the machines next year. stockbrok- ers Monday. The $350,000 machine is housed at Mark Steel Corporations plant at Garbalizer's shredder shred more tires into smaller pieces than any competitive product, according toe Brewer. He said the company is negotiating with a firm in Pennsylvania to shred up to 100 tons of truck tires for will 1230 W. 200 S. President John C. Brewer said the company makes shredders priced from $97,850 to $850,000 to handle all types of refuse from demolition timber to tires. Garbalizer hasn't sold any of the recycling via a cryogenic process. PRICES EFFECTIVE OcL 3rd thru Oct. 21st Enterprise adds extra dividend The Enterprise will be changing its publication date 17. the week of Oct. For readers, the change means you will begin the week fresh with a new copy of the paper. The change also means Two a double dividend: copies in five days time; one on Oct. 12, another on Oct. 17. Watch for the change The Sine brothers are after the best of both worlds Third cut for their downtown Hotel Newhouse property. Theyre putting $2 million worth of FILE FOLDERS 3.85box White Special BOND 8,,x11"8"x14" 3.50m, 4.50m White Special DUPLICATOR 8 x 1 1 " 3.50m White Special ZEROQRAPHY 8V2" x ii" 3.50m White Special MIMEO sya" x 1 1" 3.50m O O Renovation, addition planned for Newhouse 6 oz., 8 oz. Styro HOT DRINK CUPS) .98c, 1.15c 2" whit ADDING) MACHINE TAPE 3.70dz improvements into the existing building to recreate the look of the place in 1915. And y theyre adding a and a 19 to 20 story tower to the west of the building at a cost of about $18 one-stor- lobby-ballroo- m million. According to general Dixon Paper Center 1519 South 700 West Salt Lake City, Utah 84104 Phone (801) 973-681- 0 manager Wesley Sine, $1 million has already been spent to bring back the original feeling and another million will be used before the job is finished. The work has been going on gradually over the past four years. The hotel last week applied for status as a national historic site. Financing coming And theres been a preliminary commitment for financing out of the East to build the new addition, Sine said, which hopefully will become definite within 30 Construction could days. begin 30 days after that. According to Sine, the search has taken financing four years. The new tower plans call for 500 hotel rooms surrounding an atrium which would contain a swimming pool. A hdJM,pUmse?" structure connecting the new tower and the old hotel will house a 2,000 seat banquet room, a ballroom, and the lobby. A 600 space parking lot will be built underneath that building. The property, owned by Sine Enterprises Inc., covers approximately two and a quarter acres at Fourth South and Main. Architect for the additions will be by Ellerbe Architecture of Minneapolis one-stor- 1, -- , V y (assisted by Richardson As- sociates in Salt Lake), and contractor will be Steenberg Construction, also of Min- neapolis. Sine Enterprises is a family corporation mage up of Wesley Sine, his brother Barry, and their parents. Kept china fixtures Barry, the hotel manager, told the Enterprise the family bought the hotel in 1972 from the Utah Convalescent Home which had tried to turn it into a senior citizen Since then the residence. remodeling has been slowly taking place. The work has included new furniture, carpets and bathroom tile in the rooms on the top three floors (the old china fixtures were we felt that kept because was part of the hotel, Sine said.) Several of the meeting rooms have been restored to approximately the way they looked in 1915 when the hotel was built by Samuel Newhouse, a mining promoter and inventor. (He also built the Newhouse and Boston Buildings downtown). Inthel930s or40s Sine explained, the inn was leased to Western Hotels which decided to modernize the structure. The result was that much of the classic beauty of the stained glass ceilings and ornate gold trim was covered up or lost. Everything was grand-oisSine said, pointing out a solid concrete wall that could be lowered to divide and soundproof two meeting-banqurooms. Another example was a stained glass ceiling studded with 500 to a thousand incadcscent lights so that the ski appeared blue at night. e, et THE NATION 4 1 Enterprise The National Enterprise is published weekly by the National Enterprise Publishing Company, Inc., 500 Continental Bank Bldg., P.O. Box 11778, Pioneer Station, Salt Lake City, Utah 84147. (801 ( 1977 by National Enterprise Publishing Co. All rights reserved. 533-055- 6. Instead of holding on to escalating equipment prices and inflexibility switch. To phone equipment from Business Communication Systems, Utahs largest private telephone equipment company. BCS offers equipment flexibility that no one else can duplicate with substantial savings over Bell systems. You get growth, dependability and savings. Join the hundreds of Utah companies, professional firms and institutions that have made the switch to lower cost BCS supplied phone systems. We'd be happy to show you the details. Second class postage paid in Salt Lake City, Utah, No. 891300 R. George Gregersen Publisher Alene E. Bentley Editor Larry Weist Managing Editor Dean Alsup Sheri Poe Milt Pollczer Staff Writers Mary McMillan Gaber Senior Editor Business Communications Systems 487-474- 1 Utahs largest private telephone equipment company Kristopher R. Passey Creative Director Todd Curtis Artist James M.Schutz Research Director Opinions expressed by columnists herein are not neoessarily the opinion policy of the National Enterprise. Send all submissions to P.O. Box 11778, Salt Lake City, Utah 84147 Not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts, Subscriptions $24 per year 50 cents per copy a fase |