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Show 1 8 Iiibrry flftjjj I&rotlj Treatment Plant Bids alt Sake Opened 76e TZeotd s An Ernest Hemingway Memorial Museum will be set up at the late authors home nt Ketchum, Ida. This move flRST, the Individual had been kept quiet until the authors widow could remove his manuscripts and other material from their home in Cuba. The U.S. Navy is taking no chances and is doubling its lookout forces along the Atlantic coast for Soviet submarines In fear of a sneak attack against U.S. Polaris subs. Behind the precaution are the Tecent Soviet threats against unidentified subs in its waters. Charles A. Boynton, Jr., Salt Lake business man, has been selected by the Mental Health Advisory Council as its chairman. The group appointed by the governor, had its business meeting last week. The members named Darrell Kelley, Ogden school principal, as vice chairman, and Mrs. Jennie Kearl, state director of elementary education, as secretary. The councils task is to aid the Board of Health and community health centers in a coopefative program. ber' Just in case youre interested Ingemar Johansson is in training in Lapland up near the Arctic Circle getting in shape for a possible fight with Sonny Liston in Canada this winter.' Heres a new innovation lor housewife shoppers. A New Jersey supermarket is busy plugging the opening of its first bowling alley just a few minutes respite from browsing midst the food counters, beauty aids, pots and pans, etc. etc. Lighting Cost Meetings Set The Board of Equalization and Review has completed the list of properties which will be subject to assessment for the maintenance and power in Street Lighting District 2A, which will affect all properties on a number of streets in South Salt Lake. (See legals on Page 4 for a complete list of these streets.) The Board will conduct meetings in the South Salt Lake City Hall, 2500 South State, September 20, 21, and 22 between 4 and 5 p.m. to consider any and all objections any property owner may have to the levying of a tax and assessment to pay for the cost of maintenance and power in this lighting district. During these hours the lists will be open to public inspection and any person feeling aggrieved shall be entitled to a hearing. A person failing to appear before the board and make objections known will be deemed to have waived objections to the levy, except as to jurisdiction. The meetings are being held at the order of the South Salt Lake City Council. Salt Lake City, Friday, September 15, Vol. 24, No. 37 Lions Carnival To Launch Community Playground With the objective of cooperating in a project to create a community playground on a now vacant lot west of the South-ga- te Ward meeting House, 27th South and Main, the South Salt Lake Lions Club will conduct a carnival Friday and Saturday, September 22 and 23 on the lot, with feature attractions for both youngsters and adults. The playground will be a joint S. S. L Police Turn and Lions the of Club, project In Fine Record the Southgate and Burton SecThe South Salt Lake ond L.D.S. wards. start each Police Department made an The carnival will 6 excellent record during the at will and oclock evening month of August, a report and a feature other rides, fish pond, races by Marshal Henry Dipo shows. with and games galore, special Out of 33 cases, including as to such be offered prizes auto theft, burglary, molest, steak dinners at the Western petit larceny, assault and King Restaurant, 2750 South battery, missing persons, and 2nd West, a permanent wave illegal entry into the United from Orvilles Beauty Salon, 2641 State, and others. Hot States, 28 were cleared up. The report also shows n chips, drinks and dogs, fish that during the month there desserts will be sold. were 379 citations for variIn announcing plans for the ous types of traffic violanew playground, Orville tions. Livingston, South Salt Lake Lions Club president, also reports that the club has recently finished a drinking fountain at the Madison School for the use of students. Ground breaking ceremonies for the new Mens Dormitory 3 District Scouting to be erected on the WestminsMeetings Scheduled ter College campus at a cost The Wasatch District, Uniof approximately a half million versity of Scouting will hold dollars will be held September three council meetings Septem18 at 4 p.m. with college admiber 21 and 28 and October 5 nistrators, members of the at 7:15 p.m. at the Granite Park board of trustees, and guests Junior High School, 3700 South participating. Completion of 5th East. ' The meetings will the building, to house 120 stube for the benefit of Cubbers, dents, is scheduled for 1962 Scouters and Explorers of the occupancy. The dormitory has district. been designed as a companion Reed G. Bills is leadership building for Hogle Hall, the training chairman, and Marwomens which was shall K. Brinton is training completeddormitory, in 1960. chairman. At the September 18 cereThe training course is demonies, introductions will be signed to acquire scoutmasmade by Allan W. Bosch, ters. academic vice president, and The worst part of doing will be followed by music nothing is that you never take selections. Chaplain Maurice Continued on Page 4, Col. 3 any time off. merry-go-rou- Ten Cents Per Copy 1961 Chamber Gets New Season Under Way The South Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce got away to a new seasons start on September 8 with a luncheon meeting at Holiday Inn, 3040 South State, which featured Donald Madsen of the Internal Revenue Service, Department of Alcohol and Tobacco, as speaker. nd Program Set For Ground Breaking The chamber members discussed plans for a membership drive scheduled for December 8. The organization also will with the South Salt co-oper- ate Fire Department in observing Fire Prevention Week October Fire Chief Samuel B. Davies is chairman of this event for South Salt Lake. 8-- 14. The second luncheon meeting of the chamber will be held Friday, September 22 at Holiday Inn at 12:15 p.m. at which time the speaker will be Rex W. Hardy, trust officer of Zions First National Bank. Mr. Hardy will discuss problems arising when death enters into division of estates. Meetings will be held the second and fourth Friday, of each month at Holiday Inn. Dont Forget Saturday Night Firemens Ball Dont forget Saturday night-th- e night of the South Salt Lake Firemens Ball to be held in the South Salt Lake Auditorium, 2490 South State. Dancing begins at 9 p.m. A feature will be the giving away of a television set dona- ted by the South Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce. Receipts will be turned over to the Mutual Benefit Fund of the South Salt Lake Firemens Association. Bids for enlargement and improvements at the South Salt Lake Sewage Treatment plant at 21st South and 4th West were opened last Saturday at a meeting of the South Salt Lake City Council. Six bids were submitted and letting of the selected bid will be made soon by the council. The total cost will be in excess of $200,000. Most of the new work, which will greatly increase service to the city, will consist of construction of a new digester tank and digester operating building, and modification of existing sewage plant piping in order to improve operations. Other work is scheduled. Completion date has been set for some time in the spring. Templeton and Linke are the consulting engineers for the project. The council granted a petition to vacate an alley running south from Cordelia Avenue 125 feet west of State Street. Authorization also was given to the Police Department to send representatives to attend a statewide crime conference to be held in Manti September 20. Four officers scheduled to attend the meetings are A1 Sexton and Bob White, criminal investigators, and Norman Kay and Val Bess of the Traffic Division. Rates of Disease Under Year Ago Clinical and confirmed cases of illness iii the state totaled 14,043 for this year through the week ended September 8, a big drop from the preceding year when the total was 25,776, according to figures released by the Utah Department of Public Health. Measles cases totaled 1,311 so far this year, a large decrease from the 4,693 a year ago. Influenza cases also were down sharply, with 3,971 reported for this year against 9,001 a year ago. Polio cases were up with eight this year compared with three last year. The figures for some other diseases, with the 1961 count listed first, are: chicken pox 1,046-84German measles 3; strepmumps tococcal infections cancer tuberculosis 3; 8; whooping cough is hepi-titinfectious diphtheria 72-8- 5; Utahns To Join In Space Age Exposition Seventy-on- e board presidents, and chief chairmen executives of the nations largest corporations, including three from Utah, will serve as the Board of Industrial Advisors to the Western Space Age Industries and Engineering Exposition to be held in San Francisco next April, it has been announced by Herschel J. Brown, vice president, Lockheed Aircraft Corporation, chairman of the group. The corporations headed by the individual members include all the leaders in the various fields of western industry and represent total assets in excess of ten billion dollars, W. J. Wilkin, manager of the Space Age Industries Exposi tion revealed. He said, The men who have been responsible for the spectacular expansion of the Wests industry during the past decade are giving leadership to a new growth program which contemplates full utilization of the production potential and technological developments that each- industry can contribute - to the whole. The first step is represented by the Space Age Exposi- tion which can be likened to showcase of the a wide-scopmost advanced products and ed methods being developed by each of the basic industries. Complementing this will be the displays of the federal government agencies showing the tremendous variety of products, parts and components they are buying and seeking for the gigantic defense, scientific, domestic and aid programs. As well as the wests fore- most industrial executives, the governors and economic development agencies of the 13 western states and federal agencies, there are 162 western chambers of commerce on the sponsoring roster. Utahns scheduled to be represented are Royden Derrick, president, Utah Manufacturers Association; John Greer, works manager, Hercules Powder Co., and Hal W. Ritchey, vice president, Thiokol Chemical Corp. 899-1,35- 3; 5,837-8,21- 8; 66-7- 424-41- 4; 61-21- 0-- 6; 537-17- 9. Water Users Assn. Annual Meet Sept. 19 The annual meeting of the Utah Water Users Association will be held in the Governors Board Room at the State Capitol Tuesday, September 19 at 10 a.m. Committee meetings will precede the general sessions, from 9 to 10 a.m. Remarks by Governor George D. Clyde, election of officers for the next year, district reports and seating of several new district directors will be included in the days activities. |