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Show Jr. C of C Shapes Up in S. H. Off to a running start, the Sugar House junior chamber of commerce will hold its nomination meeting Wednesday, March 30, at 7:30 p. m. at Harman's cafe. Elections will follow April 14, and regular bi-monthly meetings will be held the second and fourth Thursdays of each month. These announcements were made this week by Allen (Bob) Ever-shed, Ever-shed, prime mover behind the new civic organization. He, with Al Smith, Taft & Co.; George Henry Johnson, architect; Bob Rytting, Credit Finance; Dean Adams, Hofmann's, and Al Furse, Fullers, will constitute the organi- zation committee. Charter night has been set for April 28 with an inaugural banquet, ban-quet, Evershed, Sugar House Finance Fi-nance official, reported. There are 22 prospective members, mem-bers, and an invitation has been extended to all young men of the i community to join the movement to give Sugar House an organization organiza-tion of doers who take civic betterment bet-terment as their project. The junior group is striving to have sufficient force by Sugar House clean-up days to take matters mat-ters into their own hands, and with the help of the senior chamber, cham-ber, spic and span Sugar House for its gala promotion. The Salt Lake junior chamber of commerce is carrying out the details for organizing and extending extend-ing the new Jaycee chapter fh Sugar House. Joseph Carstensen, a member of the Salt Lake Jaycees, is chairman chair-man of the extending committee. At the meeting March 17, the potential Jaycees heard remarks by Robert C. Poe, past president of the Salt Lake Jaycees and candidate can-didate for state president of the Utah junior chamber of commerce. Poe commented upon the Jaycee Jay-cee creed, which he described as a "fistful of Philosophy." Brigham Smith, past executive secretary of the Salt Lake Jaycees, Jay-cees, and Chris S. Metos, national director, spoke briefly about junior chamber activities. |