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Show THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1953 OREM-GENEVA TIMES U. Festival Presents Opera, 'LaTraviata The University oj Utah 1953 Summer Festival will close under the stars in Stadium Bowl Saturday Sat-urday night with the last performance per-formance of "La Traviata," Verdi's Ver-di's popular romantic opera. A perennial favorite of music lovers, the opera is being sung in English, as have all operas presented pre-sented in the festival since 1949. This is the centennial! year of the work, which has never been out of standard repertoires of leading LOANS From $50.00 to $3,000.00 Consolidate your bills Buy a Car or Furniture Take a Good Vacation Get Money for any worthy purpose Take up to 24 Month to Kept Low Rates H.A.C 333 W. Center 1 CaU Lynn R. LeVitre Fhone 4ZN R SHARON A ward canyon party will be held at Giles Ranch July 18, commencing at 3 p.m. There will be sports and games for all ages, concessions, and dinner at 6. A bonfire program will follow dinner. din-ner. Proceeds will go to the building build-ing fund. All ward members and friends are invited to attend. Sustained recently as new officers of-ficers of the Relief Society were Phyllis Hancock, president, and Dorothy Hatch, first counselor. Outgoing officers are Sadie Elder, Theresia Pyne and Mabel Nelson. companies since its premier per formance. Leading roles of Violetta and Alfred, the lovers are being sung by Beverly Sills and John Druary, who starred n the, fes tival's opening hit, "Naughty Marietta." last week. Grant Gar- neL powerful baritone of the New York City Opera Co., is co-starred as Germont. i Sally Bailey and Gordon Pax- man again are seen in leading dancing roles, supported by the university's ballet under Chore-oeraoher Chore-oeraoher William Christensen. Maurice Abravanel, music direc tor., conducts a 40-piece sym phony orchestra and a 36-voice chorus that critics have called the best to appear in any festival tc date. IVINS HATCHERY NOW OFFERING UTAH COUNTY POULTRYMEN HIGHEST QUALITY BABY CHICKS LEGHORNS HAMPSHIRES ORDER NOW AND INSURE DELIVERY DATE IVINS HATCHERY American Fork, Utah Phone 455-J IT'S HOUDAV TIME IN UTAH Day ol '47 Qimm Ana Clork and SaK Lolc Clty'i Mayor Earl J. Olado !ook at (mutual Utah com on HOLIDAY MAGAZINE. Tho August Inuo of HOLIDAY, now on the notion'! nowtttandi, dtvotei 14 pagM of broath-toklng color picfurot and IntorotNng loirt fa Utah. Tho Mgazlno, which dcrlbo Utah at "riio rldwil of all ttatot In natural wondors," will bo road by an otrlnratod HOLIDAY reading audlonot of bttwoon four and flvo million poo-plo. poo-plo. Coming at a Umo whon fhoro will bo many (olobraHoni throughout Utah, It has been tuggottod that mayors of Utah dtlM proclaim HOLIDAY'S tales porlod at "Holiday Tlmo In Utah." SON WRITES HOLIDAY MAGAZINE Safety Points Cited for Moving Hay Derricks Be careful in moving and operating oper-ating hay derricks under or parallel paral-lel to electric wires. This was the plea directed to farmers today by J. Newel Stephens, Steph-ens, Southern division manager for Utah Power and Light Co. Mr. Stephens pointed out that needless accidents with hay derricks der-ricks occur every year. He listed several safety points for farmers to follow: 1. Never move derricks near electric wires with their booms up. Booms should be securely fastenend at both ends, and held firmly in a horizontal position while being moved. 2. Do not touch chains, cables or wet ropes while the derrick is near a power line. 3. Do not ride on the derrick while it is being moved under or near a power line. 4. Never, under any circum stances, attempt to raise or move electric lines. 3. If in doubt or in need of as sistance, call the nearest Utah Power and Light Co. office. Mr. Stephens asked that in calling the Power Company office of-fice to give reasonable notice so necessary arrangements can be made to have trained linemen supervise the moving, a service for which there is no charge. If necessary, he said, the line will be taken out of service. She's popular. She's ctfractive. She drinks a quart of milk a day. UTAH MIL? : F In the August issue of HOLIDAY HOLI-DAY MAGAZINE, Saniuel W. Taylor calls Utah a fairyland of enormous beauty and tells of the copper mine at Bingham, Dead Horse Point, Monument Canyon, The Needles, Chester Park, Arches National Monument, the Goosenecks, Goose-necks, Zion Park, Bryce Canyon, Salt Lake City at Conference time, plus many other features which make Utah the greatest of all the states in its natural scenic beauty. "Everything begins and ends at Elanding," says the author. "At Bingham you'll remember the hairbreadth hair-breadth approach to the mine through the town's single street, so narrow that the dogs pro verbially wag their tails up and i down. In Salt Lake City at Con-, ference time, local residents stay at home, turning their city over to visitors. At Myton, you stop for honey, the best in the world, because be-cause nothing blooms in the Uintah Basin that makes bad honey; and at Rosevelt you find the Indians eating T-bones and the whites ordering hamburgers. At Vernal, you find the town on the upbeat after a local recession." 'Bear Lake has the unreal, picture-post-card, blue-green intensity inten-sity of Canada's famed Lake Louise, and from it you go over the hump and down Logan Canyon, a gem among the state's many canyons. Provo is proud of its ?21,-000,000 ?21,-000,000 annual pay-roll." "Salt Lake City Is the worst city in the world to do business in, you're told by an individualist who moved to Ogden. 'Rebates, lookbacks, discounts my hell, practically everybody in Salt Lake can get it wholesale. Here I make twice the money for half the work." "' "Greeting your entrance into Ne. vada is a sign, 'Where the West Begins.' At first this seems strange, but after you get into Nevada you realize how right it is. You haven't been in the West. In physical layout the villages of Utah are New England. You have been in an island fairyland of enormous beauty, peopled by a unique brand of tightly-knit puritans," YIMP VIEW , Reporter RUBY LARSEN President Carlyle Bunker visited vis-ited , the Sunday school with a message from the stake presi-decny presi-decny concerning the Orem Stake outing at Wolf Creek - Pass on July 24th and 25th. He asked the Elders quorum under the direction of President Myles Karris, to be responsible for transportation to the outing. Sacrament meeting was under the direction of the MIA. The LDS girls gave the program. Fourteen ' individual awards were present-, ' cd. The first silver gleaner award ! to be given in Timp View was presented to Louise Sackett. j The Genealogical committee and partners and the bishopric and their partners held a social in the canyon. It was a chick' aree and as entertainment each one contributed a a part of their life story. The meetings are every other Tuesday, the next one being the 21st of July, at th home of Bishop and Mrs. Clay Benson. Members of Nina Jones' Sunday School class met at her home and worked on their scrap books Watermelon was served. You'll know right quick what we mean by that headline when you learn what your dollars buy in this great new 1953 Buick Special. You get a lot more room than the same money buys elsewhere real, man-sized, six-passenger room. You get power flash-fast Fireball 8 power die highest horsepower and compression ratio ever put in a Buick Special. You get a ride that big-car soft and steady and level die Buick Million Dollar Ride of all-coil springing, torque-tube drive, X-braced framing. You get wonderful handling, luxurious lux-urious interiors, superb visibility plus ft long list of "extras" that don't cost you extra. And those "extras" alone, at no extra cost, are like a welcome Christmas bonus. Direction signals, sig-nals, twin sunshades, lighter, trip mileage indicator, automatic glove box light, dual map lights, oil-bath air cleaner, full-flow oil filter, vacuum pump, bumper guards front and rear they're all yours in this Buick at not a penny extra. So how about looking into the good cheer to be had here? How about visiting us this week for a thorough sampling of die greatest Buick value in 50 great years? $20 88 Mo1 TJ, 0"c - J quip Mi .' , to 1 W'K lAL l WSJ tm. m mil s""" i n ii it it i i4i ..x LINCOLN Zaida Wallace Phone u939 Rl The stake high council will be in charge of the program in sac rament meeting. Leo Poulson was in charge of Sunday School. Talks were giv en by Shirley Edwards and Eug enia Bliss and the sacrament gem by Carolyn Prince. The MIA Maids, in Gypsy at tire, participated in the activities i of a gypsy camp Monday night at me nome ot tneir leacif r, Lie AHred. Fortunes were told, games played and gypsy stew served to the following: DeAnn Cooper, Carolyn Crawford, Gretta Olsen, Carolyn Shurtz, Colleen Jacklin, Lorna Gordon, Marilyn Peterson, Olenda Richards, Karen Terry, Sherrie Boothe, Gwen Robbins, Kathryn Wallace, Mrs. Lucille Russell, and daughter, Karma, of Provo and Maureen Stuckl from Santa Clara, Utah. IF YOU... Have a business or factory and would like GAS HEAT J you are now eligible! We can handle any conversion or new job in boilers or warm air furnaces. Wasatch Furnace and Appliance 120 NORTH UNIVERSITY PHONE 3956 Provo's Gas Appliance Store! -WHBH tSTJEI AUTOMOBUS AU MHIT BUKX Witt BUHD THO- r I s ' ' . - - . - (k "- jfitn " ' . - -,," irl ,- J AVUI i',- --4 ' 'I I , - -mr.t . , IBS) y?c I E WITH hi&pm I W&l There is plenty to see in Lftoco-Land and Utoco Stations throughout the area arc equipped to give you the service which will make your trips more enjoyable. First, they have the products which assure you of dependable performance from your car. Utoco gasoline is the best we have produced in our 44 year history. It is seasonized for . maximum power fof summer driving. New Utoco HD-M Motor Oil is a great f ightin' oiL It fights acid, fights sludge, fights wear. There just isn't any better motor oil made. Before going on your trip, drive in to your neighborhood neigh-borhood Utoco dealer for complete car service. Every where in Utoco-Land, you get superior Utoco service and products. Let's CO... ivith UT0C0! You'll Like Our Clean White Torch . Rest Roomt 1 1 1 P. E. Ashton Go. UTAH OIL REFINING COMPANY 2nd NORTH AND 1st WEST PHONE 155 PROVO |