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Show I S Grand View Timpanops Ward Elders Collets Sharons Cooperative Provo R. F. D. NO. 2 Educational and Recreational Box 252-A Association Orem, Utah By Emery McKellip now a matter of The Utah County Fair for was a credit to it, all from it angles history. Viewing the management. Our Mr. Ivan Burr, is deserving of much praise for his efforts in stimulating interest in the Orem Sfe usual carried off first prize in fruit 1937 is displays. class community display. To Mrs. Donna Park York goes the credit for the unique design and also for placing the exhibit. It demonstrates her remarkable artistic qualities for work of that nature. We congratulate the Fair management on its splendid show and hope they will continue to maintain its high stardard of quality in the future. B . Welcome Young Editors I I Once, again the Voice of Sharon announces with of the pleasure that the youthful editors and news writers Lincoln High School will have a page each issue of the , Voice of Sharon. The work of these young writers for the last two school years has been outstanding. The page devoted to news was one of the important sections of the paper, eagerly read by sjudents and patrons alike. Under the Erection of Principals Warnick and Jolley and Miss Wages; Mr. Peterson and Miss Anderson of the English Departments of the Junior and Senior High Schools, this years contributions should be fully up to previous standards. We are glad to welcome the school page to the Voice of Sharon. Mass Meeting Set To !. Protest Tax Increase undertaken by the Elders Quorum of the Timpanogos Ward has been highly successful is evidenced by the production of 1,273 No. 2 and No. 2'i cans of high grade sweet forn. workers of Sharon Priesthood Stake met early one morning to harvest the fr:its of their labors, and they were joined later in the day by their wives and other feminine members of the ward who cut and prepared the corn for canning It at the Sharon-Uta- h Cannery. will be stored in the regional storehouse in Orem until needed for distribution under the Church Security Program. Elder Willing Planted early in the spring on two acres of land donated by Amelia Latta, the corn has been irrigated, weeded and cared for by members Jf the Elders Quorum. According to Philo Edwards, president of the quorum, members have responded willingly whenever the call for workers has gone out, especially at the time of harvest. Field Assistance. Those who assisted at the field Luzzell Philo Edwards, were: Robbins, Reed Gappmayer, Wilford Rasmussen, Arnold Burning-haCurtis Kimble (a visitor), L. J. Salisbury, Frank Healy, Joseph Adams, Ezra Patten, Frank Keele, Woodruff Jensen, Morgan Skinner, Elvis Terry, Glen Row-leNorval Kitchen, Richard Bigelow, Blanche Adams, Fern Adams, Jack and Klein Adams, Mrs. Elnta Nielson, and Mrs. Luck Rasmussen. Cannery Contributor At the Sharon-Uta- h Cannery those who contributed their services were: Mr. and Mrs. Philo Reed Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. Gappmayer, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Healy, Mr. and Mrs. Alden Patten, Frank Keele, Isabelle and Lois Keele, Margaret Gappmayer, Daisy Elma Nelson, Lucy Rasmussen, Nielson, Glen Rowley, Leaili Row-leFay Kitchen, Richard BigeSkinner and Ezra low, Morgan Patten, Officers of the Quorum are: Philo Edwards, President, Luzzell Robbins and Reed Gappmayer, first and second counselors, and Wilford Rasmussen, secretary. 4 y, A mass meeting will be held in the Lincoln High School Auditorium tonight (Friday) at 8 p. m., for all citizens of Orem and Sharon Stake, at which a defense imagainst the raise in taxes which has recently been be will Commission, Tax planned. State the by posed Members of the County and State Farm Bureau and County officers will be present. All tax payers are urged to attend. Orem Chamber of Commerce has voted to support Bureau on its stand to oppose the tax increase. Farm the fflurch Meetings and efttessages .... . Announcements Sunday Services ' " EDGEMONT WINDSOR Wilford R. Stubbs will be the Windsor Ward M. I. A. officers business speaker at sacrament meeting and teachers monthly meeting will be held at the home Sunday evening, when a special of Miss Blanche Nielson Thurs- genealogical program will be presented. Musical numbers are being day, October 7th. -l Church Security Project sponsored by the First Quorum of Elders of the Grandview Ward has and been . successfully completed under it, more than 1,063 cans of first class corn have been produced. Try, Try Again Last spring, under the direction of President Dean' D. Nuttall and his counselors, Roy Davis and Sharland Harwood, an acre and a half of land was leased for $15, on which golden batam corn was planted. Due to the land having lain idle for three or four years, the Elders were unable to get a stand at the first satisfactory planting. They tried again, but the weeds took the crop." Finally after a third planting a satisfactory stand was obtained. The corn was cultivated and irrigated by various members of the quorum, and in spite of the difficulties and delay in getting it started, the corn has matured and the harvest has surpassed all expectations. The corn was harvested by quorum members and with the help of their wives and Relief Society members, it was husked, cut and canned. More Subscriptions Will Insure Better Delivery, Better Paper Assignments for September, to visit the wards are as follows: Edgemuiiit, Harvey Booth and Cordelia Booth; Grandview, Abram B. Liechty and Louise Liechty; Lake-vieBryant H. Jolley and Annie Jolley; Pleasantview, Amelia Lat-tSharon, Floience Shepherd and Nellie Cordner; Timpanogos, Geo W. Sid well and Clara G. Sid well; Vineyard, Geo. F. Wells and John K. Allen. 02-J- a; Dont Wait If you are not visited by a solicitor this next week, dont wait to be called upon, but get in touch with the office by telephone or letter at once. We want everyone i this community to have the paper, and by cooperating with us you need not miss a single issue. rs Association and principals of the different schools in the Alpine School District met Wednesday at the School Board offices in American Fork to make plans for adult school classes to be held throughout the district this winter. Junior Coordinator Earnest Clayton has this work in charge and will be active in getting the plans under way. School lunches were discussed, and preparations made for a membership drive to be launched within the next two or tyirer weeks. was in Mrs. Mabel Nielson charge of the meeting, and those attending from the Lincoln District were: Mrs. Ruth Johnson, presiof Lincoln dent of the P.T.A. High School, Mrs. Kate Cordner for the Spencer School, Mrs. Vct-t- a and for Vineyard, Madsen Thorit C. Hebertson, Principals Earl A. Beck, Aldwin Chatwin, and Mrs. George Wells, Reporter. A meeting will be held Wednesday evening at the Seminary buiid- - Many Sharon Exhibitor Win Awards At Fair y, Mass Meeting arranged by the ward music committee, Mrs. Olea Schuman and STAKE PRESIDENCY Mrs. Ossa Ferguson. All members will of the ward are invited to be presSharon Stake Presidency meet Sunday morning, September ent, at 7:30 p. m. 26th, at 10:15, in the Stake Administration Building. GRANDVIEW Sacrament meeting will be in charge of the Ward Genealogical UNION MEETING headed by LeRoy DaUnion meeting will be held at 2 Committee, will follow the The vis. program for m Sunday, September 26th, p. use throughfor outline prepared Sunday School, M. I. A and Bishout the church on that night. oprics, including Ward Clerks. VINEYARD Relief . Society General Conference will be held in Salt Lake City and Thursday, an Wednesday The September 29th and 30th. formal educational program of the Relief Society will be featured in for the following departments Stake Officers: Wednesday: Opening Session, Teacher's Topic Dept., Theology, Literary, Music and Social Service; Thursday: Officers meeting, General Session. Wednesday evening will feature The House of a sacred pageant Israel, at 7:30 p. m., to which the public is invited. Sid-we- ll t y, Flour, Electric Light, 48 Lbs $1.02 (Noiie sold to dealers) Sugar, 10 Lbs. .... 55c 100 Lbs. ..$5.39 .37c Nutola, 2 Lbs ...10c . Ginger Snaps, Lb." Soup, Campbells Tomato, 2 cans ....15c 25c Milk, Standby, 4 cans 17c Coffee, Ace High, 1 Lb. Corn Flakes, Kellogg, Lg. Pkg 10c Peanut Butter, 2 Lb. Jar 25c White King, Large Pkg ,30c :...5c BANANAS, LB. POTATOES, Idaho Russetts, No. 2 100 Lbs -- 67c When you eat Meat, you want Good Meat. Try our Market for just such Meat. Our Prices Are Right. Pot Roasts, (Lean Cuts) Lb 10c ..25c . Shortening, 2 Lbs 33c Hams, Whole or Half, Lb 17c Cheese, Mild, Lb. -- -- 25c . CORN, 3 cans $1.35 FLOUR, Red Star 48 lb. bag Crystal Wedding Oats, Package ....19c 19c Cheese, Lb 33c Nu Bora Soap Pkg. with Bowl A-17c Soda Crax l, 2 Lb. Pkg 5c Tomato Soup, No. 1 can 12c Bread, 3 - 5c loaves 37c Honey, 5 Lb. can Case 25c $1.95 Peas, 3 cans 19c Macaroni, 3 Lbs 20c Milk, Standly, 3 cans MEATS ft Pot Roast, Baby Beef, Lb. Circulators? Per Lb. our Hardware Department tt Assured Quality is Economical f? Y THE BROS COMPANY ? Y DEPARTMENT STORE OF PROVO- - Valley Feed & Flour Co. WHITE FAWN FLOUR LEADS THEM ALL White Eagle Flour, Cash Valley Famous. Golden West Electric Light, and Red Rose Flours (featuring Maxfigjds Golden M. Silver M. Dairy and Poultry Feed and H. & T. Poultry and Dairy Feed. DEALERS IN HAY AND GRAIN 151 North Univ. Ave. J. S. Smith Phone & -- . -- Now on Display in TAYLOR ...' 114 Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y ?Y Y Y Y U.V.H. institution" to decrease suffering and increase efficiency and happiness among the men, women and children of this An - region. Let Us All Cooperate Co. 3rd So. 2nd West Phone 34 ?Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Hedquist Drug s Sons. Props. We Draw Your Plans, Build and Finance Your Home I I Y Y al Q 30c ..29c ; Weiners, 2 Lbs We have plenty of guns and amu-nitio- n for deer season and also have a good buy on one 30-3- 0 Winchester and one 25-3- 5 Savage rifle. and up j 13c Bacon, very good quality, by Piece $2C)50 -- 8 Specials for Sat., Sept. 25 -- , ESI 1 from page one) property jointly or as tenants in common and tax payments have been made in conformty with such ownership, each tenant in common or joint tenant is a taxpayer amd entitled to vote if otherwise qualified. Respectfully submitted, B. M. JOLLEY, Secretary of the Metropolitan Water District of Orem. The New Super Heated Air Down-draCompare Prices. $916 00 Total Worker Volunteer Many v In addition to the full time ser vices which were partly compenThere were more than 13,270 sated as indicated above there were participants in the summer recrea- numerous volunteer workers who tional program conducted put in from one hour to several center under the immediate day as contributed help. These direction of the Scera organization, contributions of help are. not listaccording to a report which has ed in the statistical report. for playground Money spent just beam released by the managers of the Association equipment and the source from which it came is as follows: Activities Detailed Of this numbeT 5,656 participat38.95 Alpine School District ed in swimming, 4,327 in soft ball, Scera $38 95 Organization base ball, volley ball, kick ball, childrens dancing and horse shoe .$77.90 Total pitching, and 1,390 in the comInsufficient Assessment Community dancing program. Without the contributions the munity and Church outings acnot have been counted for 1900 more. program could This is one of the finest records conducted on Scera membership alone. ever compiled in our community assessments Membership for mass participation during sum- assessments for such activities as mer recreational programs dancing and swimming were only sufficient to partly sustain those Ten Employee There were ten employees rep- activities. resenting various agencies participating in the program who helped conduct the activities during the NOTICE OF summer. A total of 4,664 hours was ANNUAL MEETING spent by those workers in managing and conducting the program. To All Members of Most of these workers were perSharons Cooperative manent summer employees and Educational Recreational due to the nature of their work Association were paid salaries. This number included pool and ground careNotice is hereby given that takers, girljt to operate concession the annual booth and receive meeting of the membership as provided for Association assessments, three WPA workers in the Articles of Incorporaassigned to the recreational center tion will be held on Monday, by the Works Progress Administration at Provo, and two repreSeptember 27, 1937, at 7:30 p. m. at the Sharon Stake Adof sentatives of the Department ministration Saint Education of the Latter-da- y Building, Orem, Utah, for the purpose of Church, also one part time recreational leader partly compensated electing a board of nine trustees and receiving reports of by the Alpine School Toard of the officers of the AssociaEducation. tion and such other business Contributing Agencies as may properly come before A total of $916 was paid out durthe meeting. ing the summer for the expenses and salaries of these employees. H. GRANT IVINS, The money was paid in by the conPresident tributing agencies as follows: (Continued ,We Are Never Undersold by Chain Assn. WPA of the United States $412 50 75 00 Alpine School Board ....: Department of Education of the Church of Jesus Christ 150 00 Saints of Latter-da- y 278.50 Paid by Scera Participate in Activities Report Shows Contribution List Given HAVE YOU SEEN High Stores. Recreational lt, HIGH COUNCIL C. Lucius Laudie and Joseph A. Council meeting will be Murdock will be the speakers at at 7:30 p. m. October 7th, at the the Sunday evening services, and Stake Administration Building. Joy O. jClegg and ElRoy Murdock will sing a duet. The program is be under the direction of Victo FAST MEETING M. Anderson as chairman of tor Due to General Conference to Comtne Ward Genealogical be held on the first Sunday in mittee. be will fast postponed October, day and for one week. All member LAKEVIEW officers are requested to take noassistant Merrill Christofferson, tice of this change. Scout Executive of the Utah National Park Council, and his wife will be the speakers at the Sunday DANCE STUDIO TO evening service. The Christoffer-son- s OPEN SEPT. 25TH have just returned from the Miss Evelyn Hair announces "the Scout Jamboree ield in Holland opening of her dance studio, the and a trip through Europe. Helen "Luana School of the Dance, for Hoover will read, and a splendid Saturday, September 2Sth. Class musical program is being arranged will be under the direction of Virginia and private instruction Taylor. given. This studio is an authorized K. & R. System Studio, and Miss B. SHARON Wat supervisor of dance inThe Sunday meeting evening struction, will be a featured teach- will be under the direction of the er. Ward Genealogical Committee. The classes will begin at 10 a. President Adclbert Bigler will in Ward talk on the subject, m. the Timpanogos Objective of Amusement Hall. Saint Active in Every Latter-da- y Temple Work. George W. will treat the topic, "Why OREM TOWN Saint Should every Latter-da- y Assist, and Amelia Latta will By Weston Farley How the Plan OperO is for Orem, bes-- town in the speak on numbers will be ates. Musical state, R. is for rhymes that I'm trying rendered by John K. Allen. to make. TIMPANOGOS E is for Elephants that we aint Ray V. Wentz, David L. Row-legot here, M is for more things we're gettSr., and C. Wilford Larsen will be the speakers at the Sunday ing each year. night meeting, to be in charge of T i for teacher, who makes us the Ward Genealogical Committee. Musical numbers will be; solo, feel glai duet by Gappmayer; O is for ord7 she says we should Isabelle members of the Junior Genealogihave. W is for words we 6pell right now cal Class and a group song by tht A Junior Genealogical Gass. and then, N is for never will I make rhymes story will be laid by Mts. Florence Shepherd. again. Of Mu-na- t MD ll&o n U n 1 i Relief Society secret- n, Thousands Participate In Summer Program 24, 1937 13,270 The Voice of Sharon is making one last attempt to place every one of its readers on the subscription basis. In the past, even since putting on the campaign for subscriptions, the paper has gone to every hoflie served by the publication, subscribers and non .subscribers alike. We are now making a'final drive for subscriptions and expect the head of every family to be oo that list. If you do not receive any more copies of the paper, it will no doubt be because your name is not on the subscription list. Better Delivery The purpose of the subscription basis is, as you know, to guarantee better delivery, since it will then come through the U. S. Mail, and to insure to you a still better paper than you have yet had. if you are in 2 Will you call doubt about your paper? All subscriptions which are already paid for will become effective with the first issue ou receive through the mail addiessed to you personally, not just as a box holder, and will run from that date for one year. P.T.A. Plans For Coming Year Sharon Winners At County Fair Members of the Parent-Teache- September For Voice of Sharon Phone 043-JTwo Senior Temple excursions will be held in Ottober, Wednesday the 6th and Tuesday the 2bth, from the Sharon Stake, to the Salt Lake Temple. There were 91 members who attended the temple from Sharon 1937. 1, Stake since September for The number of endowments living weie 3; eu.dowments for the dead, 104; wives sealed to husbands, 14; children sealed to parents, 50. The program for Sacrament services, to be given in each ward on Genealogical Sunday, Sept, 2(th, is outlined in the Church Section of the Deseret News of Saturday, September 11th, 1937. A meeting of the Genealogical Society of Utah will be held in the Tabernacle on Friday evening, Oct. 1st at which a program will be featured by the youth of the church. Upholding the high standard set by the prize winning exhibit entered by the Town' of Orem at the county fair, residents of Orem and Sharon Stake were receipients of many first, second and third prize awards. Stanley Robert Top All In the Horticulture Department Stanley Roberts topped all others with five first prize awards, and one second. Fruits exhibited by him were Bartlett pears, Delicious apples, Lincoln pears, and Giant prunes, and he received a blue ribbon for best display. Prize Fruit Grower Other prize winnei s in the same department were as follows: M Ost: Kader, Tokay grapes, 1st and 2nd prizes, grapes, 1st; Dick Burr, Golden Delicious apMcKintosh apples, 2nd, ples, Rhode Island Greening, 2nd, Winter Banana 3rd, and 2nd prize for (Continued from page one) bet display; C. H. Davis, French Sharon Stake Administration prunes, 1st; J. M. Haws, Zinfidell 8 A. and at m. V. Watkins next Monday. M. Vernon, Building p. grapes, 1st; Sam Bradshaw, J. H. Trustee Named Clarence York. Hale peaches, 1st; Tracy Colvin, The Board of Trustees is at H. Grant Ivins is president of (Continued on page" three) present constituted as follows: H. the board yvith Walter Holdaway, Grant Ivins, James B. Ferguson, vice chirmin; Victor C. Anderson ing ftr parents and teachers of this district. A splendid program Roy Gappmayer, Virginia B. Poul-so- is manager and Ersel Cook is Walter Holdaway, Orlando ary-treasurer, Henry D. Taylor and refreshments have .been arJolley, Rudolph Reese, William is auditor. ranged for, and a good attendance is desired. ' I The That the corn growing project i Subscriptions Sought AMELIA LATTA, Reporter Priesthood Project Brought to Conclusion Com Harvest is Bountiful Many Willing Workers Congratulations to Workers Stake Genealogy Elders Succeed Security Pr eject r HA RON Fence Posts, Barbed Wire Field Fence T Y Y v |