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Company to hold concert fundraiser for Wounded Warrior Project

A Blackfoot company is celebrating their one-hundred-tenth anniversary with a concert benefiting the Wounded Warrior Project.

Country chart toppers Eli Young Band and honky-tonk veterans Emerson Drive will be belting out some of country music’s hottest tunes Thursday night, all for a good cause.

“This year we’re celebrating out 110th anniversary…and in celebration of that we want to have a concert to thank our employees, thank our customers, and thank the wounded worriers and the veterans that have served our country.” said Quinn Stufflebeam, CEO for Title Financial Corporation.

“Anything we do to support veterans, military is very important and wounded worries have endured a lot,” said Dwain Stufflebeam, owner of Title Financial Corporation. “We want to give them back something…we can’t give them it all back, but we want to give something back to them.”

Title Financial Corporation is one of the largest regional title companies in the western United States currently serving 57 counties throughout Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming.
The companies history dates back to 1905 when Stufflebeam started an abstract company in Bingham county.

“This business has been in business since World War 1, World War 2, Korean, Vietnam wars, Desert Storm and all the wars in between, and we’re really here because of those veterans and the sacrifices they made,” says John Roberts, Executive Vice President of the Wounded Warrior Project. “So we felt it was very important to say thank you and this is way we can do that.”

The wounded warrior project serves veterans and service members who incurred a physical or mental injury, illness, or wound during their military service.Everyone’s recovery process is different depending where you are in your own rehabilitative and transitional process.

There are four different programs within the wounded warrior project: mind, body, economic empowerment and engagement. Each is designed to give wounded warriors a well-adjusted mind, body, as well as economic empowerment and the ability to stay connected with other wounded vets. As of July 1st more than seventy-three thousand current or past service members are using the program.

Event organizers say the concert will not only be a great time but it will give the community a chance to give back as well.
The concert is Thursday night and there will be plenty of food and drink vendors on hand for everyone to enjoy. They are also closing the celebrating with a spectacular fire-works show following the concert.

Tickets are $25 and you can buy them at this website.

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