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Show !BE PAPER TIIAT IIAS BROUGHT SUNSHINE INTERESTING, WITH MORE NEWS THAT'S THE FEATURES YOU LIKE TO READ INTO Uhl ruWio Lftrwy - ahv LEHI'S OLDEST, LARGEST AND BEST NEWSPAPER LEHI, UTAH, THURSDAY, JUNE 27," 1946 NUMBER 50 C7V VUMMw-MiM Lehi Lions utend State Convention A woup of twenty motored from . C: to attend the State Conven-k. Conven-k. t inn's Clubs, held at Ce- rXL .T.me 20. 21. and 22. Del WW . T ' 11 T?,m .lf. Interesting Pair Pres. Smith tgates In Decoration Business mine rresiaenT,, ajihu Tw.eleet: Wayne Umstian- sen Kicnara ummui Ubert. They were accompanied W their wives, and the following ;mbers: Dr. and Mrs. Elmo Ed-iington, Ed-iington, Supt. and Mrs. D. R. Mit-dieil, Mit-dieil, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd B. Adam-Ion Adam-Ion Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Robi- Mr. and Mrs. Byron Whipple. Mr. Robison was a speaker at 0,e of the sessions. Governor erbert B. Maw was the lunchon Friday, having flown down from Salt Lake City to participate an tne garnering. Maw discussed the pros- mz fnr the use and manufacture of Utah's natural products, being very enthusiastic on tne suDject oi Steel Plant, and the UlC wv" - , development of water power in the State. j vjMor Tf. Grander. Utah Con gressman, emphasized the theme of world peace, urging memuers vu nWrvp the teachings of the Mas ter to aid in bringing this to come to pass. D. A. Skeen, past President of th Lions International, and a ohartpr member of the first Lions club in Utah, stated that the purpose pur-pose of the Lions Club is to im-nmvfi im-nmvfi small communities. He point- r - . - . i- ed out that a large percentage oi Senators and Congressmen come from small towns, and that each little settlement is important in aie nation. A very fine series of entertainments entertain-ments for the Lady Lions had been planned by the women's group at Cedar City. This included a luncheon lunch-eon given at the Second ward church there, a trip to Cedar Breaks, and a very fine program of selected numbers from the BAC t Cedar College. An impressive ceremony was held at the rim of Cedar Breaks, and the entire party remained to attend the Governor's Banquet and Ball, Saturday evening. 1946 Wheat Program Announced Lands Bond Purchases Mrs. B. 0. Bdrnes, or Betty, as she likes to be called, gets out early in the morning to supervise the hansrine of the attractive ban ners used to provide a gala at mosphere for Roundup Days, fane likes to be on hand to see that the job is done right, and gets right in and helps with the actual work when needed. Betty likes the outdoor life, and the stimulating climate of Utah. She really enters Into the spirit of the occasion. For six years, following a bus accident, Mrs. Barnes was unable to walk, remaining in a Kansas Citv hosDital for three years, un dergoing a series of operations, in cluding bone grafting. "I have a piece of someones shin in my back," said Betty. "He didn't want it known who he was. When I saw the green grass after three years, I wanted to eat it, it looked so good." Her husband. Bopularly known as Benny, was a. victim of respira tory trouble. They left Seattle and their publishing business there, to live in Utah whose dry air worked miracles in Benny's health. Traveling throughout the State, this friendly couple are acquaint ed with most of the business men In the various towns. "Yes I know "Dude" Larsen down in Kanab. He designs so many Western nov filtiea. He really does a lot to ad vortisA Utah. His pictures are gorgeous. Each postcard you buy in the dime store was taken from a large painting which he made. The Lehi Sun The Personality Presents . . . of the Week Put Out Camp Fires T,nnns nn the 1946r wheat Crop will average about $1.46 a bushel on a farm loan basis, about eight cents a bushel above the average of 1945 crop loans. Farm and warehouse-stored wheat is eligible eligi-ble under the loan program which will be administered by county AAA committees.1; Wheat Loans at 90 percent of parity at the beginning of the marketing vear are a legislative mandate under the Stabilization Act of 1942. 1946 Apple Crop Price Announced Npw mnYimum nrices for ap Dies frnm t.bp heeinnine of the 1946 season until August 31 will hp ti an -nor etandard box or bushel loaded on car or truck at shipping points, the oince oi Price Administration has announced. an-nounced. September and October Oc-tober prices will be $3.08. The new prices, effective June 12, are based on increased production produc-tion and packing costs and average aver-age about one cent a pound higher than original 1945 ceilings. Headlines in the June 6, 1946, T?nriSF,VELT (Utah, STANDARD read "BLAZE SWEEPS UINTAH CANYON RECREATIONAL1 AREA: CARELESS CAMPERS wp.T.n RESPONSIBLE". It can happen in Utah, reports J. Whitney Floyd, Chief Forester-Firewarden for the State Board of. Forestry and Fire Control, and it can hap pen even more easily now than during dur-ing the first week of June. Thousands of people of our state used our canyons for recreation Picnic Areas with expensive improvements, im-provements, campsites made convenient con-venient for motorists, fishing streams planted ' with legal-size fish all of these have cost the taxpayer tax-payer money, and the taxpayer can. get his money s worm oi relaxation only if he can use these areas. He cannot use them if we allow them to De destroyed de-stroyed by fire, states Mr. Floyd. Sheriff Theron s. nan, uian countty firewarden cautions all mo torists, picknickers, nncers, ami fishermen who take to the highways, high-ways, the mountains, and ' the streams for their rourcn oi uuy fun, to be very cautious with their campfires, matches, and cigarettes. Lets leave these areas nice euou8u to come back to next year, requests Sheriff Hall. Salt Lake City, Utah, George Albert Smith, President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, in expressing his commendation com-mendation of U. S. Savings Bonds, this week stated, "We have noth ing more secure m the way of an investment than Government Bondds." "During the war period," said President Smith, "many people have manifested their patriotism and wisdom by purchasing Government Govern-ment Bonds. In many cases the Bonds are still being held and are earning interest for the holder. This investment has been a bless ing to many people and what they have saved will be useful to them in the future. Some individuals, however, are disposing of their holdings and spending their money for unnecessary things, and if hard times come they may fina themselves them-selves unable to meet their obligations. We miarht learn a lesson from the ant. eH harvests his supplies when they are available and stores tliP.m ut against the day when it would not be possible to obtain them. The result is that his laroer 19 HSU allv well stocked. The grass hopper, a much larger incest, does not. ntiprat that wav. ile does - r t . nnt. lav nn anvthinc in store for. hard times, but depends upon prov idence to provide him what ne needs, and the result is that most grasshoppers starve to death. "I fear that some human Demgs a lik the irrasshopper and do not take advantage of the opportunities oppor-tunities that are theirs in a reason able way. L they would take a Uaann frnm tile Ant. theV WOUld lay up the food that they need and always have some on nana. who have purchased Government Bonds will hold them and gain the benefit that results frnm nnsseRsinsr them, they will be wiser than if they dispose of their holdings and squander their sud-stance," sud-stance," concluded President Smith. "Surely we have nothing more secure se-cure in the way of an investment than Government Bonds." President Smith served actively on the xecutive Committee of the Utah War Finance Committee during dur-ing the war, and has long been an arden advocate of thriit. A prominent figure this season of the year in Lehi is the director direc-tor of the Lehi Roundup celebrations. celebra-tions. Chosen president of the Lehi Civic Improvement Association Associa-tion at its organization in 1941, Alva H. Wing has played an important im-portant role in the history of Lehi. As president of the association, asso-ciation, he has been responsible for the success of the roundups held each year, ana nas aiaea in seeing that proceeds of the affairs af-fairs have been directed toward worthy causes, the first of which was a $1200 sterilizing unit for the T.ehi hnsnital. Since boyhood, Alva has been interested in music, pumping the old reed organ and trying out various chord combinations. He has served in many imDOrtant panarities as organist in ward and stake organizations, and his beautiful music has made many a stake conference a lovely memory. Aiwa vs. willing to serve his fellow men, he has often given up plans lor his personal enjoy ment that he mav be of assist ance on some program. He is an able accompanist as well as soloist, and has Dlaved for some of the best local talent as well as visitine artists. . His love of music has been shared bv his family, and he has taught his daughters to pe;v form on the piano, violin, organ and solovox. His unsemsnness in transriortine his organ and sninvnx tn assist in orograms will be lone-remembered m tnei hpnrt.s nf his associates. . His versatility is not limited td leadership and music, for he u rated among the top men of hit nrnfpssinn. mortuary science and his words and deeds of kind-l ness at times when they are most timely has endeared him to a wide circle or irienas. Bus Contest Here Monday Democratic' Tea Tuesday nD Qisn announced increases , of 21 cents a standard box in prices of apples sola m taiuui-nia taiuui-nia from June 13 through June on rrv,io inprensfi OI auuruxi- OU. w . mately . cent a pound at retail was mandatory unaer uie ow-w)nnfin ow-w)nnfin Trvtensirm Act because unfavorable growang conditions have resulted in a suDsiauu induction in-duction in the California summer sum-mer apple crop. MAKE YOUR OLD SHOES LOOK LIKE NEW Have them repaired at DELUX SHOE REPAIRING We do invisible Half-soling While-U-Wait Service The Rio Grande Motor Yay's new quarter-million-dollar fleet of ctroom inoH hUKP.S. last WOTU. Ill Obi v.ut""v 1 transportation comfort and luxury, has just arrwed trom tne eastern maTinfnrtiirer. and the buses are being placed in regular service on the network of highways servea uy the Rio Grande in Colorado and Utah. One of the new 10-ton aluminum o-;Qnta wriirh seats 37 persons in comfort undreamed of a few years ago, will be held out of service temporarily in order that it may De displayed in Lehi on the morning of July 1, at the Lehi Drug Co. here, and the person guessingf to ot nlan will be conducted the closest penny, the cost of the new luxury liners will be given a wMinnLtrin ticket to any point iicc " -' ir - - on the Rio Grande Motor Way system, including Mesa Verde isa-tional isa-tional Park. The new buses have air foam re-coats re-coats individual fluores- UllUiig cent lights at each seat, and ample fnr hainraee under the seats, this latter feature permitting travelers trav-elers to take their baggage into v io with' them Tather than checking it. Radically new dual- spring suspension results m yA-na than any previous Bmvuiuci model, and there is more head room inside the bus. A new auto-ditioned auto-ditioned system per- iiiavxw - - mits even distribution of cool or warm air through the bus for comfort com-fort in summer or winter, and the buses have all of the latest safety features. Mrs. Dean Prior, Democratic chairwoman of Lehi, announces that a Democratic Tea will be held at the Memorial Building Tuesday, July 2 at 2 p. m. Can didates for various state ana county offices will be in attendance. atten-dance. The committee in charge, as-slsHnor as-slsHnor Mrs. Prior, are: Mrs. James Zimmerman, Mrs. Roosevelt Roose-velt Smith, Mrs. Virgil Peterson, Mrs. Svlvan Clark. Mrs. ueorge Smith, Mrs. Rodney Dickerson, Mrs. Victor Smith, ana Mrs. uon Whimpey. I Located in MEILING BUILDING Main Street I Special Police Added For Celebration Sixteen additional policemen have been added to the regular fnrre for the Roundup celebra tion, according to Marshal Clemn Turner. Four men have been provided from the county sheriff's sher-iff's department, four from the state highway patrol, ana eight from Lehi. f Trfvp.al men servine as peace officers are: Harold Christensen, Isaac Bone, George Atkinson, Rodney Dickerson, Wayne Col- fcdge, James Beverly, ina June Davis. STREETS OILED. One of the improvements accomplished ac-complished in preparation for Roundup Dayi is the oiling of the streets approaching the Rodeo i -l fi X'-r-fVi onn North grounds at ruoit iwim, from Main On Third West. This will aid materially in reducing reduc-ing dust during the visits of thousands thous-ands of cars during the celebration. Feed, on Wing Storms that clear the air of insects in-sects frequently bring starvation to chimney swifts as the bird feeds only on the wing. Former Lehi Resident Dies In Montana Lehi relatives received word Sunday night of; the death of Anor Whipple, former Lehi resident, resi-dent, who died in Montana. A son of Mrs. Gay Whipple and tv.o iatP Mr. WhitDle of this city, he spent his earlf life here, and was later empioysa Dy me tele phone company. He is survived; by his wife, Mrs. Myrtle Whipple of Provo, four sons and tw daughters, his wither and two brothers, Fred and Jack, the later three from Lehi. J . -J Funeral semcb were' held) TrrnocHQw in Mmtana. Inter- ment will be Saturday in the Lehi cemetery, j Former Lehi Resident Joins Ass'n. Wilford Manning Funeral Held Here Francis R. Wilcox of San Marino, California, formerly of Lehi, has taken out a life membership in the Utah State Agricultural college alumni association, Executive Sec- etary Jack Croft said today. He graduated in 1925, majoring in commerce. While at USAC he worked in the school of commerce aiding Dean W. L. Wanlass, also a former Lehi resident. He was a member of Thi Kappa Phi, honorary scholastic fraternity. He is a former director of the div ision of marketing and marketing Agreements for the AAA and vice- president of the Federal Surplus Commodities corporation. Mr. Wilcox was an instructor in igricultural economics at the Uni versity of Southern California for wo years and extension specialist n farm management and market- ng for ten years. He moved to California in 1941 to accept a posi tion with the California Fruit Growers exchange. Mr. and Mrs. Wilcox and their daughter were in Lehi Friday stop ping for a short visit at the home of his father, A. L. Wilcox, and his brother, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Wilcox. Mr. Wilcox left by plane from Ogden, Friday evening, en route to Washington, D. C. where he will spend ten days on business in connection with his position in California. Mrs. Wilcox, the former Cleone Taggart of Morgan, will remain there with her daughter to visit at the home of her Mother, Mrs. Taggert. They will stop- here again on their return trip to California. Funeral services were held in the Third ward chapel Thursday, June 20 for Wilford Manning whi died of pneumonia in the Lehi hospital hos-pital June 16, Bishop George A. Ricks, conducting. The opening song, a duet by Mrs. Homer Trinaman and Mrs. Vernon Nielson, "Whispering Hope", was accompanied by Mrs. Fern Johnson. John-son. Opening prayer by Charles Turn-was Turn-was folowed by the life sketch and remarks by Bishop Ricks. Song: "Lay my Head Beneath the Rose", by Richard Holdaway. Speaker, II. W. Barnes. Song, "My Faith in Thee", Patsy King accompanied by Mrs. Johnson. Bishop William Had-field Had-field pronounced the benediction. Burial was in the Lehi City cemetery ceme-tery under th direection of A. H. Wing Martuary. George Barnes dedicated the grave. LIFE SKETCH Wilford Manning, son of Harry W. Manning and Esther Colledge, was born a twin, Sept. 17, 1907, in Lehi. He received his education in the schools of Lehi. Being a lover of sports and the great outdoors, he was known by all Bportsmen in the vicinity. Baseball, hunting and fishing were his favorites. He married Elista Moser, a sister to the wife of his twin brother, in Salt Lake City, Oct. 22, 1937. He held the office of Triest in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Wilford was a man who saw the bright side of everything, every-thing, and being in his company, one could not help but partake of that good feeling always present. Wilford worked for Utah Fire Clay Co. for 16 years. The com pany speaks very highly of his service, personality and dependability. dependabi-lity. tt v t-: t?i: lie is surviveu oy ms wue, jju-sta, jju-sta, 2 daughters, Carol May Rnd Dana Sue; his father, Harry Man ning, and three Bisters, and six brothers. His Mother preceded him n death ten months ago. Tours Points of Interest in Utah Miss Dorothy Monegu of Wash. D. C, left Tuesday, June 18, after two weeks visit here as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Webb. This was Miss Monegu's first visit to Utah. She and Mrs. Webb made an extensive tour of local points of interest, travelling around the loop through Provo Canyon and Am. Fork canyon and Cave. They also spent some time in Salt Lake City in the Capitol Bldg., Temple grounds, and Welfare Wel-fare sauare. driving out to Im migration canyon and other points of Interest. They visited the Arsenal at Hill Field where Miss Monegu's connection con-nection as a US Government em ployee, gained them the courtesy of a military escort through the plant. Streets Decorated t.pM business districts are gay with colorful decorations, combining combin-ing western colors with patriotic motifs. Mr. and Mrs. B .O. Barnes (Benny and Betty) or the western Decorating Co., Provo, were in charge of this important detail. Duane Foffinden Assisted in the work. Cat Can't Mew A species of cat which does not know how to mew is found in South America. TRACTOR FUEL lty2c per Gallon This is not No. 1 Distillate but a specially refined Tractor Trac-tor Fuel. WASATCH CHIEF 21V.C per Gallon The very best summer gasoline gas-oline on the market. Come and get a tankful and see for yourself. NEW SUBSCRIBERS Ruel Evans, Leon Peet, Mrs. Orson Or-son Hacking, Tooele. Egff Preparation The secret of proper egg jepara-tion jepara-tion no matter how you prepare them is low cooking temperature. High temperatures and overcooking toughen the protein and desljoy the best flavor. Grant Gas & Oil Saratoga Road West Lehi |