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Show Dungeon 1m Petrifies British Gyesf DuriEifi Park Cily Visit home. Park City intrigued Mrs. Kelly. "I can go home now and when we see a movie showing an old western town, I can tell my husband and five children that I've seen it (or one just like it).' The dungeon petrified her. "It was awful," she related, "but the rest of the town I love." In fact she termed her trip to the United States "fascinating" "fascinat-ing" and when she leaves Utah she will see the country around Philadelphia where another pen pal lives, so she will have had a taste of the east as well as the "Wild West" as she called it. Her first comment about the United States was, "In the United States I see the Stars and Stripes almost every place I go!" This from a Britisher on her first trip to our country. coun-try. Mrs. Violet Kelly of Plymouth England, saved her money and came to America to visit a couple of pen pals she has been writing to for ten years. Mrs. Ruth Blair of Orem, Utah, and Mrs. Kelly became pen pals quite by accident but the friendship flourished through letters and photographs and culminated in the recent two-week visit to Utah which in cluded a day in Park City. Mrs. Blair, an employee of the Utah Valley Hospital, took a vacation and the two ladies have been sightseeing and enjoying en-joying getting acquainted. A trip to Vernal saw one of Mrs. Kelly's desires fulfilled she wanted to see Indians; she also realized another ambition-she ambition-she was able to talk to some cowboys as they were preparing prepar-ing their supper over an open fire on the range. Western movies are very popular in England and Robert Redford seems to be a favorite. One of the highlights of Mrs. Kelly's trip was a visit to his |