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Show THE LEHI FREE PRESS Three Lehi Guardsmen Participate Hospital Notes... 4 ' ; ;f.' M , i X X .1 II' I and two sisters, Susan ne, Don, MRS. IfELEX POWELL Clyde Turner is receiving medi-c- Mark and Christine. Mr. and Mrs. ANDERSON TO REJOIN treatment. He was admitted Junior Ev ans of Lehi, share grand- HUSBAND ON WEST COAST Company B of th 115th Engineer to the hospital May 24. parents' honors with Mrs. LaDo-ci- a Mrs. Vera Anderson (Helen Poan Army National Battalion, Wagstaff of American Fork. well) and her three sons, Terry, Guard unit which was called to acAnn Richins, 7. daughter Mary Marty, and Bobbie, who have been astive duty and is now regularly of Mr. and Mrs. John Rich ins, re- ATTEND CKADCATIO.Y living here during the past six signed to Fort Lewis, Washington. ceived medical treatment Mrs. R. I. Johnson accompanied months, will leave June 1 to reMay 24 Beat, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clive to 28. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Barber of join her husband on the West a E. Beal of Lehi, is American Fork, on a trip to Idaho coast. The familv will live at Mir-specialists in the comCharles and Nola Joy Varner of Falls, Idaho. There they attended amar, Calif., near San Diego. Ma pany. He was graduated from the American Fork have a new baby the LDS Seminary graduation ex- chinist s Mate Anderson, who is Lehi High School in 1961. ercises which included a grandson serving aboard the USS Lexingson, born May 25. of Mrs. Johnson, Robert Johnson, ton aircraft carrier, has returned Yates, a radio operator, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Ruth Carter, daugh- son of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Johnson, from a cruise in the Orient. He Yates, 1020 N. State Road. He ter of Mr. and Mrs. Junior Car- formerly o' ehi. Robert was one will be stationed in California unadvanced stu- til February. was graduated from Lehi High ter, underwent tonsilectomy May of the 70 four-yedents. There were 300 three-yea- r School last year. 28. What you dislike in another, graduates who received their Sergeant Barnes is a member of take care to correct in yourself. the 115th Engineer Battalion's Mrs. Lloyd (JoAnn) Ivorsen of Headquarters Company, an Army American Fork is receiving medi National Guard unit also recalled cal treatment. She was admitted to active duty and assigned to May 27. Fort Lewis, Washington. A baby son arrived May 25 for Barnes, 25, son of Mrs. LaFerne M. Fossen of Lehti, is a 1954 gra- Gayle and Lola Wagstaff Evans. duate of Lehi High School. He He weighed in at seven pounds The oldest incorporated trade association in the country, attended Brigham Young Universi- nine ounces. Eagerly welcoming the United States Brewers Association, was organized in of and Utah. two newcomer brothers the are the University ty 1862 the same year that In Exercise "Mesa Drive" Training Army National Guard Sgt-- Lyle J. Barnes, whose wife. Norma, lives in Provo, is participating in Exercise Mesa Drive, a joint ArmForce training maneuver, y-Air at Yakima, Washington Firing Center, May L Privates Gerald Beal, 19, and Edward C Yates, 18. of Lehi, are also participating in thJ exercise. Over 26,000 Army troops and airmen are engaged in Mesa Drive, the largest joint field training ex ercise held in the Pacific Northwest The exercise is designed as a defensive combat maneuver in which a realistic enemy '"Aggressor" force engages "friendly" forces in simulated attacks utilizing all types of weapons employed in modern warfare. Beal and Yates are assigned to Lions to Roar Into Vernal at combat-constructi- ar It happened 100 YEARS Frank Curry, Clown inimitable to perform here Frank Curry to "Clown" For Fans At Lehi Roundup June 28. 29, 30 Frank Curry has been engaged to take over the performances and skills of clowning at the big Lehi Roundup to be held here Thursday, ' Friday, and Saturday, June 28, 29, and 30, according to Dean Prior, publicity chairman. Curry, a veteran of the western rodeo circuit, meanders at various speeds in as comical a showing as possible to distract the Brahma bulls from the cowboys. To the spectator, it "is a simple job, an easy job. To the rider of the bull it is a job. To the clown, to Curry, it is the enactment of a dream that started when he was five years old in Madison Square Garden. A clown's job is an easy one up to the time the Brahma bulls come out with or without riders, The clown must keep the bulls from goring or trampling the fal len cowboys, must keep a bull moving so that a cowboy can dis mount. It is dangerous, hard, and dirty. Curry likes it. He. began dreaming of being in rodeos when he first started attending them. As a boy he learned to know, if not on speaking trems, at least by sight, every rodeo performer of his day. One of them was, and is, Casey Tibbs, former champion for many seasons and one pf the most highly regarded rodeo experts in the business who now' promotes his own shows as well as entering as a competitor. Tibbs used to take Curry into the Garden where Curry would hang around the clown quarters and do chores or run errands for the clowns and cowboys. Now he is a fully qualified, highly respected rodeo clown, appearing as did his idols of a comparatively few years ago did. "I love the work," he said. "The pay is good, I save as much as I can, and I have absolutely no regrets over any of it." The work is dangerous, espec ially at the start of a career. "A bull caught me in Cincinatti and ripped me down the middle from my throat to my belt," he said. "I was in the hospital for a number of weeks. "But now," he said, "you just get a lot of bumps and bruises daily, but nothing serious." Curry has .started to hit the big time in his career. Each spring he lines up as many rodeos as he can with the producers, and after the life-savi- all-arou- , season returns to New York for the winter. This year he will work about 20 rodeos, each one having two to four sessions. Curry is a young men, a brave man, and a smart man. He is also a man living the dreams of a small boy packed into the stands of Madison Square Garden watch ing the antics of the rodeo clowns and bullfighters in the arena be low. Rodeo fans will thrill as they watch this experienced clown perform all three nights of the fa mous Lehi Roundup, June 28, 29, and I." Grease Proof Easy to Clean Goes Anywhere Long Wearing Easy to Install Goes Over Old Floor o o o IN UTAH, George Ogilvie followed the Bingham brothers Stanford and Thomas - into the Oquirrh Mountains and staked out the first mining claim in what since has become the world's largest open-pi- t copper mine: Bingham. SOLID VINYL TILE VINYL ASBESTOS RUBBER TILE Then, as now, beer was the traditional beverage of moderation . . . light, sparkling refreshment that adds a touch of Western hospitality to any occasion. Westerners have always enjoyed the good fellowship that goes with every glass. o WOOD GRAIN PLANKS o VINYL BASE o CRYSTALITE TILE TODAY, in Us centennial year, the United States Brewers Association still works constantly to assure maintenance of high standards of quality and propriety wherever beer and ale are served. Lehi Lumber Co. State Street Lehi Phone PO NS" 41 i STUDENTS VISIT AT NIELSEN HOME Julia Ann and Anita Nielsen of Beaverton, Wash., visited here re cently at the home of their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon K. Nielsen. The girls are both stu dents at Brigham Young University. Julia Ann is a prospective June graduate and will take a position as music supervisor in Crescent City, Calif. A gifted singer, she was featured as a solist in a combined concert with the oratorio choir and brass ensemble and symphony orchestra at the "Y." "bottoms JACK'S Radio & Television Sendee ELECTRIC Complete Service All Makes . . . Television - Radios Car Radios HOURS8 a.m. to i 5 p.m. dally Closed Saturdays and Sundays Phone PO 1265 North 71 5th West Lehi Kennecott's current toast to copper's future The traditional toast of Everybody In town Is talking about the car deals at Timpanogos Motor! TIMPflNOGOS MOTOR "Home for your Chevrolet" American Fork Phone SK 47 - 30. WASHINGTON ago ... For Convention A four-da- y Utah State Lions convention will open in Vernal Thursday (today) and is expected to draw hundreds of delegates from throughout the state. Charles W. Mowrey, York, Pa., director of Lions International, will be the featured speaker at the Friday morning general session in the Uintah High School auditorium. Registration will open Thurday at noon at Hotel Vernal. Featured speaker at the Friday afternoon business session will be Maj. Gen. Maxwell E. Rich, Utah adjutant general. The Utah Lions Variety Show will be presented Friday at 8:30 p. m. in the high school auditorium. Balloting for new officers will be conducted Saturday from 8:30 to 10:30 ajn., followed by another business session. At 11:30 a.m. a tour has been arranged to the Flaming Gorge damsite. Several couples from the Lehi Lions Club are expected to register for the state convention. Some plan to arrive Thursday, while others plan to leave Friday morning lafter attending high school graduation exercises here Thursday night. THURSDAY, MAY SL 196! This program will help Kennecott meet a growing problem "bottoms up the higher cost of handling more material to produce the same is uniquely different at Kennecott's Utah Smelter. It refers to a newly installed car dumper that can empty a car loaded with copper concentrate or flux by turning the 100-toload bottom side up. This far more efficient, faster method of emptying cars is another step toward the completion of the dollar modernization program at the smelter n amount of copper. The problem results from two factors 1. Copper content of ore decreasing. (Down 18 since 1950.) (Up 100 since 1950.) 2. Overburden removal increasing Kennecott is solving the problem through improve- ments typified by the car dumper This offers the.best assurance of continued successful copper production in Utah's future Utah Copper Division Kennecott Copper Corporation |