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Show THE TWO Review of Sports Events Lake View Wins M Mens Baseball Championship Timpanogo Named ai Outstanding In League Play Lakeview was crowned Sharon Stake Champions in baseball. Labor Day, Sept. 7la, after a bitterly contested game. Timpanogos was leading 8 to S going into the ninth innings, and few of the large crowd viewing the game gave the Lake-vi- ew nine a chance to win. However, due to timely hits and errors, three runs were chased across the plate to tie the score. In the tenth innings Lakeview converted one run to bring them the championship. The game was witnessed by a huge enthusiastic crowd. The league this year, chiefly due to financing the respective teams, was somewhat dulled by the Jack of enthusiasm on the part of Grandview and Sharon. Little support was given to teams by the wards, and if it is to continue successfully another year some means of purchasing equipment will be necessary. Timpanogos was the outstanding team in league play, twice defeating the champion Lakeview team A good deal of credit should be given the following managers for creating enthusiasm and interest among their players at great sacrifice on their part: Bert Skinner; Timpanogos, Leonard Lakeview, Johnson; Pleasant View, Eldon Perry- - Vineyard, Leonard Madsen, Edgemont, Earl Smith. . The teams to qualify for chamwere Lakeview, pionship play Timpanogos, Vineyard and Pleasant View. Lakeview defeated PleasLakeview defeated ant View. Pleasant View in the semifinals and Timpanogos defeated Vineyard. Timpanogos and Lakeview tied for the first half championship. Vineyard gained the runner-u- p berth. In the second half Timpanogos was undefeated until the final game, and Pleasant View gained the runner-u- p position. The caliber of play was of a high standard, and it should be the desire of 11 that this activity should continue and grow each summer. Pleasant View Girls Winners Are Tennis Courts are States Finest The most successful league conducted in Sharon this summer was that of the girls softball. All wards, except Grandview, were represented, and some very interesting and well played games took place. Edgemont and Pleasant View gained the right to play for the championship on Labor Day. After a thrilling game Pleasant View victorious. Timpanogos emerged finished a close third, followed by Vineyard, Lakeview and Sharon. marred the play Few forfeitures and high interest was maintained throughout the season. Practically all games were played on the high school campus and seemed to add much to the enthusiasm. Following the games, the girls were invited to enjoy the swimming pool. A good response is expected next summer when play is resumed. It is hoped that all wards will participate in this popular activity. The i'ennis activity was some-whretarded during this summer as preparations were underway for the courts and the building of a at beautiful dance pavilion Lincoln High can now boast of having the two finest cement tennis courts in the state. In the only tournament conducted during the season, Cullen Christensen defeated all junior players to become champion of Sharon Stake. Forty-seve- n junior players took and some interin the contest part esting matches took place. Heber Ivins gained the final round and was defeated by Christensen in a closely contested match. A men and women's tournament was drawn, but due to work on the courts play was discontinued after several rounds had been played. out-do- a German discovered rawaves in 1887, 20 years after Maxwell, and Englishman, asserted they must exist. Hertz, was fair, and it is the aim of the recreational department to make this one of the outstanding activities next year. An All-stgame with Provo on Labor Day provided that our young players afe on a par with any in the state play this year, and defeated a group of Sharon Juniors by the close score of 9-- 7. VATCE--3 For kaaBla M M FINEST DEPARTMENT The outstanding recreational facility operated by the Recreational Association is the swimming pool. Many people from surrounding communities have been very envious of this fine plunge, and have paid tribute to the progressive spirit of our community. The pool was late in opening, but during the month of July and part of August an average of ISO boys and girls swam every day. Swimming classes were conducted, and over 100 boys and girls were enrolled. Swimming races, water carnivals, etc., were conducted throughout the summer to enrich the recreational program. A boys Athletic club was orof ganized with an enrollment eighty members. Several outings and group games were enjoyed. 3 Bunker Farm Feeds Phone 015 R2 Save thru our low overhead Grist 100 lb. flcdir 3 bu. wheat $1.58 Dairy Feed Mash (Barley) $1.90 Laying Mash (Corn) ..$2.09 Laying Mixed Pig Feed Hen Scratch $1.63 $1.78 $1.49 Turkey Red Flour Wheat (Recleaned) $1.83 Mill Run (Blended) ... $1.29 Mill Run (White) $1.35 Rolled Oats (SO lbs.).. $1.30 $1.37 Dryed Pulp 50 Granite Grit 9 Grinling cwt f Mixing cwt - STORE From the Cheapest thats Good, To the Best ' , J i c. THE THREE POUND RULE The reason most people grow fat that they wait until they are fat before they do anything about it. A woman has a mental picture of herself as a slim young thing that, unfortunately, shes likely to keep until shes twenty pounds away from resembling it. Then nothing but long hard diet and training will do anything for her. Id like to tell every slim young thing to watch the first three pounds she gains. Then she will never have to worry about the others, for anyone can lose three pounds in a week on a healthy diet of fruits' and vegetables. v- Ina Clair, quoted in Saturday is ' i enng Post MULTIPLYING SAFETY Barney Oldfield, dean of American race drivers, presents the formula for safe driving: When your speedometer goes to 50, think of 55 feet. That is how far the car will travel aftcriyou decide to stop, Thats Made! invites you all to attend the Biggest Kiddie Show in years, each Saturday afternoon at 1:30 at the SCERA TheaOld Pop-Ey-e tre Starting October 3rd. Popeye Club frolic- SURUnlSlSUUnliS 71 . . Songs! 71 North 5th East SAVINGS 10 Center West OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS Compare our everyday prices with other specials Salad Dressing, AD Cl jUVjriix 23c 7c 7c 15c lLb.BrownCartcn l Lb. Powdered 2 cans Spaghetti, Pork&Beans Dinnerette, 3 Lg, cans 25c Matches, 6 Boxes to Carton . .14c 2 Pkgs. 19c Wheaties Life Buoy Soap . . 3 Bars 17c ... .... Rinso Salmon, Tall cans, 11 Lg. Pkg. 19c Pink, 3 Cans 25c' 2 JelIo,l JelloChoc. 1 A Pudding, jeuo Lb. Ace COFFEE. All 3 . 1 Pkgs. lUl High 15c ueiicatessen Meats Breast of Lamb 2 lbs 19 19 Leg of Lamb, lb Round Steak, Ground Lb 19 Rolled Prime Rib lb 19? Sirloin Steak lb. 19 Cheers! n Stage Show, Club Frolics side-vente- Boiled Ham li lb 25C Canadian Ba66n lb. ,.43 Meat Pies, 3 for 25to 19 Chili, Each 19 Cheezham, Each . Sfe . 'Ve s d ... Sfer.arfoon lrry.T Show. week only . oat Dont Miss This Great EXTRA-- 1 st in the Fall 1936 class. pinned our compliments on Varsity-Towfor the designing genius who gave us models as Trojan standing Theyre perfect . . . theyre as smart as can be. We have style-conscio- The Time of Your Life Jay TB8 . . QtS. TS It was vents last season . . . its vents again thii season . . . its the vents in your coat that puts you If You Want To Have ed .e-V-N- ... oft tAz u&coi. Fun! Fun! Fun! 1 Franco-kierica- i, t&oAe com t&z - On the Stage ij'iisIMRii u . "I jto-long- I UTAH COUNTYS Show Popularity with the former proving the However, due to the expense connected with this sport it was necessary to substitute softball the second half. Vineyard won the championship, defeatii g Pleasant View in the finals on Labor Day. The response one else, to bhare a life rather than to ma ke one of her own. There is, to many women, although the rarely admit it, an almost voluptuous pleasure in yielding In doing so they can keep their for they know that they enhance the influence which is the natural source of their power. Are Career Lonely? America, on the contrary, is relatively a. paradise to the growing host of single women. If they must work they are almesl as free as men to make a career, to the admiration and envy of their married friends. But why should such a woman he envied? A career is a lonely business, in which women usually find little outlet for their need to give devotion and service. Nor is it perpetually exciting, for there is monotony in teaching or typewriting, just as there is in housework. Moreover, women never quite forget that their principal business has long been to please, and there is. for many, a more intimate triumpl in winning admiration and love than in t! conquests of a career Most of all, the pleasure which comes from such success as one can win for oneself is nothing to the joy of sharing the success of ,a beloved husband. Marriage, even a homekeeping one, gives a woman more generous for opportunity than she always realizes. She organizes the home and dispenses the common funds, looks after the crearating herself fronjJiira-aJid-- fij his own. This is dangerous ature comforts of the toiling male to happiness, for, rightly or not, (a thing which brings peculiar the sense of possession plays a pleasure to many women) and, large part both in love and in mar- above all, she sustains his moral There are times when men absoriage. I Woman Subordinate? lutely require admiration,' when Of course it may be asked why their courage and the woman's life should be subor- depend wholly on a wifes faith. There is room in America for a dinated to the man's. The answer lies in those phychological differ- wider cultivation of these aspects ences between the sexes which of existence. Our women might American women are apt to mini- help to develop the "culinary art mize or deny, but which do exist. which we sadly lack. They might Women are, as a rule, more emo- learn the' profession of economy, tional, more dependent on human the husbanding of resources, and relationships, less able to absorb the care of material objects as in the abstract, than against the present abuse and themselves men. Therefore the average woman waste. For, as a rule, in America is often happier to live for some- - we darn socks but not sheets- - we The idea is abroad that marriage as a profession is somehow inferior to a job ; that the mere wife is a to the bus parasite compared worker. Thus I often hear married I am women say apologetically, afraid J dont do anything (1), my husband and children seem to take all my time. With this point of view I quarrel; for to be a wife is a delightful (though arduous) career, which ought not to be taken casually. Be a Better Half I believe that the desire of married women to have a personal life distinct from that of the family has tended to alienate men and to make them withdraw into a wor'd of their own. Many wives do not share their husbands careers, even vicariously. During the depression some wives first learned of their difficulties when ruin husbands was actually at the door. Perhaps one reason why husbands share so little with their wives is because they do not alwaj s find in them a better half of themselves, but often a separate and exacting individual. The truth is that a man wants to he the center of his wifes universe. He wishes her emotional interest to be focused on him. If she is to have a successful career outside the home she must turn some part of her energies and ambitions into channels which he does not share; ' and in so far as she does so, her husband may feel that she is sep' no- before jour foot can touch the cause it is without a hereditary brake pedal. When the speedoinet- - bihty, America is without a hierer says 40, think of 44 feel; if 30, archy. I know few countries where think of 33 feet, and so on. Ex- - the eiiguette of contempt is so despise reaction dis-- j varied. The Anglo-Saxoperts call this the the other races, and these despise tance. ) To find out how muchjoom you one another. The southerners scorn need to stop safely at 40 or SO the Northerners; the Easterns, lose miles an hour, Oldfields formula those of the Middle West. 00 who have been in America multiplies the "reaction distance Andre Mauaois m The ev 50 miles an At hour, three. you by would multiply 55 by three, and At.antic Monthly, know that a distance of 165 feet curious feature of America is would be necessary to stop the car. j -- Chicago Journal of Commerce. that when you visit any special place in order to form an opinion of not HUBBUB FOR POSTERITY. it, people immediately andbeg you aspecially to form an opinion not o consider that place represenBecause many experts blcieve tative. Mrs. Eliza M. J. Humphthat modern street noises will be reys, Ritta. unknown in tffe cities of the fuand street of records tjpical ture, The chemistery of the stars and sidewalk sounds were recently sealis almost as familiary as that sun ed into the cornerstone of a New of the earth. Curiously enough, oYrk building. Aecordings of honkdiscovered helium in the scientists ing horns, squeaking brakes, police before it was found here on whistles and other familiar urban sun and it derives its name from noises were made on chromium-plate- d earth, , the fact an with coated disks, copper and imperishable tarry compound, I am told that the Chinese cannot locked in a copper box. Included also were a phonograph and in- forgive the West for establishing instructions for removing the tarry Old Folks Homes where the where or be can placed records. the and aged digent playing compound Popular Science Monthly. parents of people with means can be sent. To them it is the height J. Merle of cruelty or barbarism. AS OTHERS SEE US that. be-- ! Davis in The Beware of thinking Ahoy There, Kiddies! W Swimming Records most popular. CAREER THAT COUNTS repair radios but not saucepans, many of us learned only with the depression that shoes can be re- soled, rccariiped. Women the n.ight encourage art of comerastion, which doomed to disappear. Best of all, they might gather congenial and stimulating people about them to enrich the common life and so help to evolve a society based on something more valuable than the mere dread of being alone. Breadwinner Need Wive Men can have careers largely because their wives make a career of marriage. No one knows better than women w ho tarn their living how much a breadwinner needs a wife, not only to keep house, pay the bills, and tend to the thousand troublesome details of life, hut to welcome and comfort him after a hard day. Nothing can quite replace the wife who makes marriage her first concern. A few women certainly manage to combine marriage with a career and make a real success of both; but to do so requires exceptional vitality, enthusiasm, and generosity. Therefore let the average woman who longs to do something and has ambitions for a career beware! In making a life of her own" she may lose a womans privilege of being not the equal, but the better half of her man. 1936 tin i BOYS SOFTBALL AND BASEBALL The boys of our community participated both in baseball and soft-ba- ll September. SHARON Cti'icHSEj Frost Readers Digest, Sept. 1936 I floor-walkc- OF MAGE-TH- E One of those women of the sort who carry Pekingese was carrying a Pekingese in a New York store the other day. The dog was thirsty, it seems, so she walked over and gave hint a drink at th S sanitary f, fountain. A aghast, i said to her timidly, Madam, Im afraid our custom-- 1 ers would not want to drink out of that fountain after your dog. said the woman, takeen Oh, I aback. "I beg your pardon. thought it was for the clerks." dio VOICE $22.50 FREE GIFTS 16 To those whose birthday comes during the week. Free Suckers to all whe come on time Parents: We invite parents to help their children get to these Saturday Club Matinees. It will be great sport to afternoon Pop-Ey- e see the kiddies have such fun. Why not neighbors take of youngsters. Everyone is turns bringing a truck-loa- d welcome who pays regularly the assessment of 10c "Young Eagles Story: The story gives the adventures of a group of Scouts in South America and Central America. Reviews:We are happy to make a matter of record our of whole hearted endorsement the twelve episode serial known as Young Eap'es. We shall be willing to cooperate in every way in order to make distribution effective." Sincerely and Cordially Bov Scouts of America JAMES E. WEST, Chief Scout Executive. $25.00 SHRIVERS Pter cms tuning, Top-swin- g. 7) , Saturday Only, l.tatlrea and clothes such outand distinctive Serial West Center EXTRA Felt Dress Hats Pajamas Beautiful lot of ladies fine felt dress l,alcQQ Seasons I.ateet JQL Ladies extra fine quality Rayon Pajamas, $1.00 and $1.25 values, A (Mill Run) OjC Garments . Skirts Ladies L. D. S. Garments, ONE DAY ONLY .... OU C 3 Pair for $1.00 One lot of Ladies and Misses Cotton Skirts, Real IQ ... Bargains Gowns I tJC . One lot of Ladies fancy Rayon Night Gowns, $1 values, .rcowi . n Vi v WE SELL FOR LESS Pajamas Childrens fancy Rayon Pajamas, slightly AQ impel icci Low Rent District FLETCHERS 368 WEST CENTER STREET PROVO mzzj s, |