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The former fire station, located at 258 South 1300 East, was built in 1930. When listed, it was then the second oldest relatively intact fire station in Salt Lake City, after No. 3, built in 1914. The station was built in 1930 to serve the east bench area.
Authorities in Utah lifted evacuation orders for a wildfire in Salt Lake City that threatened neighborhoods near the state Capitol over the weekend. The evacuation order was lifted late Sunday ...
A wildfire in Salt Lake City forced people living uphill from Utah's state capitol to evacuate, and it remained uncontained Sunday as more than 100 firefighters worked to protect nearby homes.
In 2005, Burger King released a line of Danny Phantom kids' meal toys. [42] [43] In 2012, a company called Jazwares Toys released a 6-inch tall action figure of Danny Phantom as part of their Nicktoons toy line. [44] In 2020, Funko Pop released a limited edition Danny Phantom figure for 2020 New York City Comic Con.
Danny Phantom is an American animated superhero television series that aired on Nickelodeon from April 3, 2004 to August 24, 2007. The series follows 14-year-old Danny Fenton who, after an accident with an unpredictable portal between the human world and the supernatural "Ghost Zone", becomes half-ghost and frequently saves his town and the material world from ghost/spectral attacks.
The animated television series Danny Phantom centers on young Danny Fenton and his coming-of-age story as a half-ghost superhero in the town of Amity Park.Over the course of the series, he betters both himself and his powers as he deals with ghosts, balancing his normal and heroic life [1] [2] in a community that does not initially trust him. [3]
Spirit sightings: A little girl and the Lady in White. Two other spirits are rumored to wander the grounds of the Paso Robles Inn. The first is Helen Sawyer, a little girl who haunts the hallway ...
Coon Chicken Inn was an American chain of three restaurants that was founded by Maxon Lester Graham and Adelaide Burt in 1925, [1] which prospered until the late 1950s. The restaurant's name contained the word Coon, considered a racial slur, and the trademarks and entrances of the restaurants were designed to look like a smiling caricature of an African American porter.