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Show CLEAN-UP READIES SALE Sugar House was as clean as the proverbial pin this week end Sugar Days following a scrub-up scrub-up conducted by the Sugar House chamber of commerce and aided and abetted and given a vigorous shot in the arm by the newly formed junior chamber. Joseph U. Eldredge, chairman, and his co-committee heads, the Sugar House paint dealers, spearheaded spear-headed the clean-up campaign conducted con-ducted Tuesday morning. Teams of broom wielders, window win-dow washers, mopmen, hoe-and-rake experts, shovelers and a fleet of paint company trucks turned to early and by the noontide filth and dirt and debris had been put on the run. The youthful junior chamber boys, together with the younger businessmen and employes, assembled as-sembled ready for work, conspicuous conspic-uous by the overalls and dungarees. dunga-rees. The sidewalks were washed down, and city street flushing trucks sluiced off the streets, washing away the ugly mud fall out of Monday. Warren Ottley, Walt Peterson, ( Howard Day and John De Haan were subalterns in the drive, each heading a segment of Sugar House to be cleansed. Steaming hot refreshments were served to the clean-up task force which had each of the dozen off-street off-street parking lots spic and span long before the noon whistle that turned them back to their routine retail duties. Representing Olympus high at " the Youth Legislature were Ed Fankhauser, Gary Blake, Scott Smith, Morgan Davis and Keith Howick. The group unanimously voted to send recommendation to pass the Colorado River project to the United States congress. Also introduced was the bill to reduce the driving age to 15 M; years; the bill was defeated by a narrow margin after a vigorus debate. Earl Spafford and Royal Hunt, local attorneys and Jaycee members, mem-bers, accompanied the Olympus group. |