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Show THE CITIZEN 4 MAY THURSDAY, 9, 1974 SMITHFIELD CONFERENCE y) lTDsl illtu)es 4 ss8ms tuiiirftirDy by Theoda Downs His truth is marching oi rang out with fervor as the Sky View High School, Choir sang Battle Hymn of the Rep .blic at the conclusion of sage from Dunn, the Smithfield conference Manners make the man. Mind makes the man. The third one he considered even more critical: The home makes the man.1. He stressed the fact that character is molded in the home, that this is where a man receives the real influencing factor in his life. President Rich said that the home and what goes on there is the responsibility of the father. The home should not just be a place to eat, sleep, and be a dispatching place. R should be a place of love, where important things of life are taught. Schools and auxiliary organizations of the church should assist and supplement, but should not have a stirring mesElder Loren C. final speaker at Utah LDS Stake Sunday morning. Elder Dunn, a member of the Quorum of Seventy of the LDS Church, began his sermon by discussing the importance of discovering why we do what we do. He said that the gospel of Jesus Christ is a hard religion to live until one can stand on his own testi-- '. mony without influence from those around him. A persons better off when he knows why he does what he does, the clergy man stated, adding everything is restrictive until he knows for himself. that these words: im-porta- gave three require- ments for such a leader-pray- er, family home evening, and attendance at. priesthood meetings. Dennis Funk, first coun-selor to President Rich, spoke on Teaching Virtue to our Children. John Heggie, second counselor, delivered a sermon called How a Husband Can Honor His Wife. Mrs. David Parkinson sermonized from the point of view of a mother, discussing teaching methods in her home. responsibility, president said. They are Philip S. Wiser of Hurricane, Lyman S. Wiser of Ogden, Theron T. Wiser of Salt Lake City, Mrs. MelRoy (Lois) Ballard of Benson, and Wallace W. Wiser and Lawrence C. Wiser, both of Lewiston. Smith Wiser will be honored on her eightieth birthday anniversary at an open house ' given by her family. The event is set for Saturday from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Lewiston 2nd-3r- d LDS Ward chapel. Mrs. Wiser was born May 13, 1894, at Lewiston, the daughter of Joseph C. and Mary Jane Telford Smith. appointed to the counciL There was also a number of priesthood advancements presented to the congregation. The Sky View Ch6ir sang their arrangement of the Mormon hymn 0, My Father, following with Still, Still With Thee. Stratford Loosle directed both the choir and the congregational singing. The organ prelude and postlude music was performed by Bernice Eskel-so- n. nt There are 27 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildr- the Mrs. Wiser has been a the at Brigham Young College at . Logan. churchs auxiliaries. She and her husband also misserved two short-tersions for their church, one m On April 21, 1915, she married Myron C. Wiser at the Logan LDS Temple. in the South and the other in Pacific Northwest. prepared by the National Districts. The custom of setting side s p e c i a 1 Rogation Days for this purpose be- a-T-he . gan more than 1 500 years Nineteen seventy-fou- r will ago in France, when French be the nineteenth consecupeasants prayed for helo tive year that the North after crop failures had Cache and Blacksmith Fork suited in widespread hu2 Soil Conservation District, because the dignity of the home was undermined, life : in the home lost, and mor- -i ality thought to be old-fashion- ed. 1 i We see this happening! today and need to get back to basic principles and rec- priesthood ends with death. ftfye Cacfje ognize responsibility, When temple ordinances have been done, a family remains a family. They touch our I lives beyond the veil when-sealethrough temple mar--( Published every Thursday at Smithfield, Utah ! to them and give them a testimony of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Smithfield. Utah 8433S Subscription Rates: $5 per year Keith Moore $6 per year outside Cache Valley a s.tuder?t at Utah . , ft h,s craft wag upset Jn rough rapids near the Red Rock Point bridge near Oneida Station. Members of the Franklin County Jeep Patrol, Robert Stone, Cecil Jensen, Lee and Larry used rescue equipment to reach the injured man on the east bank of the river. Goocher had managed to reach the east bank where he was spotted. The Jeep Patrol and Lounly ambulance were then called. Jay McKenzie and Glen Godfrey lance run at 6:15 p.m. and drove the injured man to the hospital for emergency treatment. Jeep Patrol member Biggs said the rescue group had to traverse rugged, hill terrain to reach the injured man. Was aIone ?,hrn Biggs 84335 tHrlfw( . Hendrickson ' What a father says in his home will not be heard bvj Editor society, but it will be heard He advised by posterity. Second class postage paid at to take the time parents necessary to talk to their children, time to get close Richard Goocher, 26, of 770 E. Ninth No., Logan, was treated for aspiration of water and bruises and released, from the Franklin County Memorial Hospital after a kayak accident in the ?eaJ Rlver Narrows last Week. advisory committee ; , 19-2- 6 along w ith nearly three thousand similard i s t r i c t s throughout the nation, has sponsored Soil Stewardship Soil Stewardship Advisory Committee of the National Association of Conservation is composed of churchmen of various faiths. is 80 logon Man Slightly Injured When Kayak Capsizes in River They are the parents of seven children, six of them living. (From page 1) said that Gibbons summary indicates that the fall came Zelma Wiser He died in 1963. Soil Week May stake en. devout member of Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, giving a of lifetime service in the She received her education at Lewiston School and The stake congregation will convene again in Referring then to THE DECLINE AND FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE, he Anything done on this earth without power of the relationship forever, he continued. It is important for us to pass on the spiritual inheritance passed on to us, he stated. by Laree Bodily Kenneth Hansen was re leased as an alternate and the love of God, the principles of the gospel of Jesus Cbrist, and individual After telling some very; sacred personal experien-- : ces, Elder Dunn told the. Guarantee your family Honored on 80th Birthday council. ! he said. also enjoys sports. In business matters dealt with at the ecclesiastical convention, Don Q. Dailey was released from the high - J riage, 4-- H LEWISTON-Zel- ma Three things that should be taught in the home are the Smithfield Utah Stake conducted the spiritual convention, and, under the direction of Elder Dunn, he spoke on the importance of; the home and the development of the Latter-da- y Saint within the home. concept He further stated, er k President Blaine Rich of congregation that the hope of being reunited with loved ones after this life can come only through the principle of temple marriage. ill live, . teaching important things. Love your mother, he said. That is the most thing a father can teach his children. Complete love, harmony and unity in the home will depend on this, he admonished. Things that should be taught in the home should not be taught out of the home. These things are too important to leave to chance, he added. Do not let someone else provide the influence the home should provide, he emphasized. sponsibility, stating that of--' ten parents leave their children land as an inheritance ' and that many children do not appreciate it. He advised that a spiritual heritage be left instead. In order to leave a spiritual heritage one must be a leader of his family. Elder Dunn continued. CLAKKSTON DAIRY PRINCESSES from left, are Trudy Thompson, Diane Wilde and Shauna Balls. Trudy is the daughter of Nancy and Gary Thompson, and she likes to water-sk- i at Sky View High School. Diane, the and engage in all outdoor sports. She is a song-leadcalls she Americas number one sport, what Ted and of Barbara Wilde, enjoys daughter Club leader and a also is a she A likes In she rodeo. addition debating. Logan High senior, Ann of and Kenneth Sarah the daughter Sterling scholar in speech and dramatics. Shauna, Balls, attends Sky View High School, where she sings with The Front Porch Majority. She Character w throughout eternity. primary responsibility of He stressed parental re- - He Make home a place they want to come home to, he said, and concluded with Elder Dunn quoted three statements he had heard: made the ambu Car Hits Dog $250 Damage Dee William Smith, 661 N. 1600 W., Logan; and three passengers in his 1971 Ford were uninjured when a car in which they were riding struck a dog south of Preston on Highway 34 Sunday. The Smith vehicle was 10:30 heading north about a. m. when it struck the dog to causing some $250 damage the front end of the vehicle. |