OCR Text |
Show WEATHER FORECAST 19 PUBLISHED IN SUGARHOUSE SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY, MAY IS, 1938 YOU 6 Presbyterian Church Rev. J. E. Nash, Minister 9:4 NEW BOTTLING WORKS STARTS Sugar House business men are starting up In the bottling of yoft drinks and expect to have their plant located at 155 East First South, In running order by the 28th Inst. It will be known as the Nehi Beverage Co. of Utah, and is composed of J. L., J. H. and William Primage with C. M. Brldgeman as manager. They are putting In a modem sanitary plant, and when they get it In operation, the public will be cordially invited to come and Inspect it They will bottle all soda flavors, upper-teroyal crown cola lime rick-e- y and ginger ale. They have the endorsement of the Institute of Good par-t-pa- k, n, Housekeeping. .WILL COVER MONTANA P. R. Davidson leaves Sunday for a trip through the Montana towns where he will call on the wholesale dealers for the Carpet Co. Chas. P. Cochrane HAS BOUGHT OUT CHIEF CAFE Ed. Dwyer, known all over the west as one of the best cooks ever to serve the public, has bought out the Chief Cafe on 21st South and changed it to El Dwyer's Cafe. He i rTorss and Is serving best foods " t prices See his ad In another column of The Bulletin. TTOOL ndry-Irvin- Sunday School. Kids Get Break When Fishing Season Opens Successor To The Southeast Sentinel What's Wliat, a new publication In Sugar House, made its initial appearance last week. The editor and Horace W. Shurtleff, has publisher, taken over all the mailing and legal rights of the Southeast Sentinel. - se Sug-houa- Lodge Selects New Leaders to Seventh East, Seventeenth South to Stratford avenue. 50c Hudson Avenue to 18th South, Nineteenth East to Third East. 75c anywhere outside these boundriea. Mr. Jennings stated that figures compiled by the taxi companies show that out of 2500 paasangera per month, 1000 were women shoppers using cabs instead of their own aut- LUNCHEON IS HIGHLIGHT Much credit goes to Lorenzo Hatch president of the Sugar House Rot ary Club, for the succesa of the Utah Day luncheon held Tuesday during tho district convention of the 110th district of Rotary International at the Hotel Utah, according to local members who attended. The luncheon is a part of each year's convention and each club of the district has a part in the program Mr. Hatch was asked by the Salt Lake Rotary club, hosts of the con' vention, to act as toastmaster for this occasion.. Inspiring Educator A letter to Chief of Police Webb petitioning his department to 'allow aide a taxi stand on the north-eaof the Island in the center of Twenty-First South street was sent by the1 secretary of the Chamber of Commerce after a motion was made at the meeting Wednesday Instructing her to do so. st school, conveyed e Information to us that the school tlll close In two weeks for the summer. This will allow a large number of the pupils to do considerable "'or1-- , c: tfce farms in that vicinity. J MISSION William D. Wiscombe (better known to Sugar House as Bill) left Thursday for a two year mission to South AfHca for the L. D. S. church. A testimonial was held Sunday evening in the Thirty-firward chapel for Mr. Wiscombe, prior to his departure. Mr. Wiscombe has been at the Sugarhouse Branch of First National Bank for the past four years ""j has also been active in bowling games conducted by local people. st years of age, 5000 members of the finny tribe await a nip at your hook on the opening of the fishing season. May 29 and 30 at Fairmont Park. Members of the Salt Lake County Fish and Game Association, with Wm. Davis, park deputy, and members of the Sugar House Chamber of Commerce .completed planting of 5000 fish at the Fairmont Park Wednesday for the sole purpose of encouraging youngsters to fish and be good sportsmen. Other local men named as special deputy wardena for tho purpose of properly patroling the park lake are Scott Linnell, Phil Grimm, Ray Curtis antj Mr. Davia. Older members of the local boy scouts units have offered their the day to watch the smaller children and also see that order is kept at the lake and a plan is under way whereby a systematic arrangement can be mate to take up this offer aa these boys are trained In wild life protection, have first aid knowledge and training and are able to supervise the youngsters. akK-durin- WORK NEARS COMPLETION YOUNG LADIES SING .The work of remodeling the United Five and Ten Cent Store, 1069 East 21st South street, la nearing completion and the placing of new fixtures and counter arrangement will be started this week, according to George Lucas, manager. Girls of the South High A'Cappel-l- o Trio rendered two selections at the monthly meeting of the Sugar House Chamber of Commerce Wednesday noon. The girls taking part n were Donnetta Olsen, Audrey and Dorothy Mantle. - GOEfT ON If you are a would-b- e Issac Walton, if you would feel the call of the fishing season in your soul, if you are a good sportsman, and under twelve SUPERINTENDENT BACK Crock we 11, superintendent at Sugar House station of the Salt Lake Postofflce, has returned to work after an absence of two weeks. Cecil i g FISHING RULES MADE Several rules have been mate by the people who will be in charge of the park and the fish and game men whereby the lake will be open for fishing from 7 a. m. to 8 p. m. A limit of ten fish per day will be alloted each fisherman or flaherwoman and the age limit has been set at less than twelve years. Children over that age are considered of legal age for a fishing license. omobiles. LETS OUT EARLY of the faculty of g Sugar House Gets Taxi Zone Change After bearing the proposed rezon11:00 A. M. Divine Worship. Sere ing of the city whereby the Sugar-housmon by the pastor, Wireless MesSTOPPED OFF TO VISIT zone one of center would be the Violin Solo by while the business district of the from God. Rev. Stanley Evans, and city family, sages Sunday School Missionary, Big Horn Mrs. Gladys Bingham. will be the other, members of the Basin, came through Salt Lake City 4 P. M. Young People leave church Sugar House Chamber of Commerce this week on his way from Californ- for Outdoor voted their support to local taxi Vesper Service. ia where they have spent the winter. discussion by following companies The Young People will hold their They stopped over here to visit Rev. Harold S. Jennings, representing the J. E. Nash of the Third Presbyterian service Sunday evening in Mill Creek taxi companies, Wednesday noon. canyon leaving the church at 4 P. Church. . A meeting of a committee of local M. After the service a picnic lunch men was held Monday evening in will be held. . All the young of the which the proposed changes were church are Invited to attend. RITES HELD FOB FORMER discussed and in which Wendell AshS. IL OFFICER Parents Honored by Young People ton and Morgan Sorensen went over The Young People's Society honFinal rites for George A. Phillips, taxi of the Increased the ored their Fathers and Mothers on rate problem 63, former police officer in the Sugar-houIn Sugarhouse with Mr. JenDistrict, were conducted Tues- last Sunday with an appropriate wor nings. 12:30 in the Emerson Ward ship service followed by a message at day FARES CONSIDERED UNJUST with Chapel Bishop D. G. Emery of- given by Rev, E. M. Gordon. FollowAt the present time taxi fare anying this service, Rev. Stanley Evans, where in the city from Sugarhouse la ficiating. Mr. Phillips, who spent several a Sunday . School Missionary from 75c per person but with the new sysyears In Sugarhouse and had many the Big Horn Basin of Wyoming, tem a 25c zoie will be possible for friends among the merchants, suf- presented three reels of motion pic people living within a radius of eight fered a stroke several months ago tures, two of them demonstrating blocks of the c. shopping center of and succumbed to illness Friday at the far reaching work of a Sunday his home, 1364 Seth Eleventh East School Missionary and one showing The new zone will embrace the folstreet. (Continued on Page 4) lowing territories; 25c, 15th East, v l Hansen, one - A. M. NUMBER 11. Kyn-aato- Dr. William II. Kilpatrick 0 Called "Americas greatest teacher because of his inspiring work at Columbia University, Dr. William H. Kilpatrick is known to many Utahns for his lectures In the recent Progressive Education Association convention In OPEN JUNE 20 playgrounds of Sugar-housthe Sugarhouse park and the Fairmont, park will be opened June to Information from 20, according the office of Miss Jessie Schofield, playground supervisor, PLAY The GROUNDS two e, VISITING IN THERMOPOLIS Staff phota P.-J. E. Nash accompanied by GRAND CHANCELLOR ASHER Salt Lake City. lie will return her daughter, Hasel Belle, left for In without contest .., to Utah in June to teach in the NO SCHOOL TODAY Thermopolls, Wyoming, on Tuesday. j Cut, courtesy Standard-ExaminKulon W. Clark, Judge of the Brigham Young University sumThe newly Juvenile Court and Frank Y. Lake, grand trustee. The great mer school. They Will attend the graduation of Owing to a session of the Teacher's Taylor will participate in the The Grand Lodge, K. of P. met elected grand chancellor then ap- were the their nephew, Elmer Bell, who gets none of the public schools Institute Conference on Elementary Eduspeakers at the last of a his diploma from the Thermopolls In Ogden last Friday and Saturday, pointed Henry Schoenfeld, Provo, aeries of were in action P.-Provo cation today. at June A at meetings of the with nearly 100 delegates and mem-pe- n grand master at arms; H. M. Olsen, High School. on Auditorium School the Forest In attendance. Mayor Peery Ogden, grand Inner guard and A. W. Thursday evening at eight o'clock. made the speech of welcome which McFarlane, Garfield, grand outer Music was furnished by the articuShow was responded to by Judge J. A. guard. Be lating unit of the Glee Club and the Howell and others, then the meeting The Grand Lodge put Into effec- First Grate Band. settled down to transact the business tive practice the benevolent fund for (By the Editor and other Friends of The Bulletin) .before It. Knights of Pythias. They put an Colorado and Nevada. At Irving High, on June 1, at 8:15 The relief benefit fund croated In age limit of 50 years on new memA social hour followed the meetp. m., Jean Renees' School of the 1920 for relief of members who sur- bers who might come into the order ing, during which light refreshments LOOSEN THE CHAINS Dance will present the following: vived the Caatlegate, Utah, mine and want to take advantage of this were served. The present administration is afraid to acknowledge it is ab"Alice In Wonderland. this follows disaster baa grown to an extent that fund, but older men who are already The Third degree will pe conferred the story entirely and It is presented It baa been mate permanent. It now members off the order can sign up on candidates at Garfield, on May 21, solutely wrong in its treatment of business knows that every amounts to $15,000 It waa reported. and receive the benefits. We would by a team composed of Past Grand time it moves it welds the chains of depression (or recession) by a large chorus. closer about the erstwhile strong limits of the common, everyday "Enchanted Forest," the main perSupreme Representative J. A. Pet- eamestlly advise every member to Chancellors. ' business man, who in the past years built these United States into formers win be Nathalie Hubbard, ty, of Salt Lake reported that the lose no time in signing up for this The administration knows that if it does make Jeanne Jensen and Beverly Egbert, various old age security programs really benefleient feature of the orNext Wednesday night, May 18, a great nation. this acknowledgement it will lose face, but rather than face the of the State and Federal govern- der and provide a fund that will be Hermoine Temple, Pythian Sisters, supported by a large cast. world with a candid acknowledgement of the facts, it tacks thii "School Days, presented by Ilauna ments are not Interfering with the Calanthe-MyrtGodsend to those left behind when will meet with and that hoping against hope that a lucky break will come its way Olsen K. an of No. Benevolent Fund of the Pythian or- a member goes to join that great Lodge 1, during which presentation open Pln 1929-3- 0 one many character dances will be given. der. He also stated that very few, boat of valiant souls who have gone 'meeting In commemoration of Moth- way and save it from a disaster which will make the like a seems there thousands school arc picnic. Every day Sunday "The Swan," with Barbara West- If any, Fythians are on the W. P. A. before. er's Day. The Sisters will prepare brook aa the Swan and a large bal rolls. The Pythian Sisters held their the program and the entertainment of men being laid off, men who have families, they are being addlet chorus. There were delegates in atten- Grand Temple meeting in a sc perale committee of the Knights will be In ed to the ever increasing army of unemployed who arc on relief. Encouragement This promises to be one of the out- dance from the lodges at Salt Lake, hall presided over by Mrs. Rosa Wil- charge of the cats. Walter Maury The shackels must be stricken from business. millions when be will Work to must be given given employers. who la chairman of that committee standing presentations of the season Price, Provo, Park City, Garfield, liams of Park City, Grand Chief of and tickets are now on sale for ad' Ogden and Magna. Grand Chancellor, that order. They chose Pearl Mc- Is In complete charge of the culinary this is done and an ever increasing national debt will stop climbmlttancc. Programs will be furnish- George H. Darling, presided over the Cauley, of Provo, to succeed Mrs. arangementa. Come and bring your ing. I'ibor will receive good wages for an honest days toil. Rackstrikes will cease, good ed at a later date. Williams; Bertha Sprattllng, Helper, husbands or your wives or your eteers such as; Lewis will vanish, meeting! of the convention. of will once cash the and more come America times to J. A. Pelty, of Salt Lake, and E. Grand Senior; Ida Nelson, Salt Lake sweetheart. Meeting convenes at 8:00 flow should which in instead channels it will business flow in the N. Radcliff, of Price, represented the City, Grand Junior; Tillie Johnson, o'clock. of being tied up in securities that will do no one any good for if Ogden, Grand Manager; Margaret Supreme Lodge. business be throttled then the securities will be insecure G Claud rand Asher Chancellor McFarlane, Garfield, Grand Mistress the Saturday meeting Claud of Records and Correspondence; Em- mate a abort talk Wednesday night At WILL PAINT YOUR Asher, of Salt Lake, was chosen ma Archibald, Park City, Grand Mis- to the membera of Calanthe-MyrtWHATS THE REASON? CAR WITH- -. unanimously to fill the office of tress of Finance; Lafon Mayberry, Lodge and gave a brief outline of We fail to see whv the City Commissioners refuse the owners Grand Chancellor. The other1 officers Garfield, Grand Protector; Margaret what his work and policy is to be .f the taxi service of Salt Iikc City permission to place meters iu elected were James H. Dale, Tooele, Grubaugh, Grand Guard. during the coming year. Sold Exclusively By cabs. H. sestheir It seems a logical thing! for meters to be installed so vice The turned in at this chancellor; Ralph reports grand sion vice R. James the chancellor the that E. information the Dale, that Jones, Price, grand prelate; gave grand person who rules the cabs will not have to pay for more Of course, the City Commission is all Gleger, Ogden, grand keeper of re- Sisters are more than keeping pace waa present Wednesday night and miles than he or she rules. the boys were more than pleased to wise and have zoned Salt Lake City, set the fares and a person cords and seals ; Thomas Driffell, with the Knights in membership. 1079 East Cist So. A movement la on foot to form a hear his few remarks along the lines who only rides a few blocks has to paf according to the zone. So Hy. 1738 Magna, grand master of the ex In Sugarhouse Arthur Marsh, Magna, Past Grand Chancellor Association of proposed work for the ensuing long as the taxi company are agreeable to the expenditure of plac-- ( chequer; grand tribune; E. L, Butterfield, Salt to Include the states of Utahjdaho. year. COMMENTS, Continued on Iagc 4) FOREST Mrs. T. A. er author-educat- 20-2- T. COMMENTS To Spring Presented June First . . le vi sit-do- life-blo- . $2.95 le NU-ENAM- EL Apex Electric Co. od |