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Show PROVO (UTAH) SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY, JANUARY 2 1, 1934 PAGE FIVE C5 0 s 8 SUNDAY SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST . Sabbath school 9:45-10:45 Saturday. Sat-urday. Preaching at 11 o'clock. AH are welcome. REORGANIZED CHURCH Regular Sunday services at the Reorganized church, 234 West Fourth South street, Sunday school at 10 a. ra., morning services serv-ices at 11 o'clock. The Young Folks' Rrecational society meets every Thursday evening at 7:3C o'clock. S. S. HOLM, pastor. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH First Church of Christ, Scientist, Scien-tist, corner of First East and First North streets. Regular Sunday Sun-day morning services, 11 o'clock, subject "Life" Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Wednesday evening meetings are held at 8 o'clock. Reading room open daily from 2:30 to 4:30 o'clock, excepting Sundays and holidays. ST. MARY'S EPISCOPAL A House of Prayer for All Peoplr 50 West Second North Church school at 10 a. m., services serv-ices at 11 o'clock. The sermon will be given by a minister from Salt Lake City. St. Mary's Guild Will meet Monday Mon-day at the home of Mrs. M. L. Summers. CATHOLIC CHURCH 180 North Fifth West Father Victor Herring, Pastor Masses at the Catholic church will be held Sunday morning at ! and 10:45 o'clock. Instructions for children at 9:45 o'clock. PROVO COMMUNITY CHURCH (Congregational) University at Second North Rev. N. C. Walliti, Minister Sunday school at 10 a. in. Classes Class-es lor all ages. Morning worship at 11 a. m. Anthem by the adult choir. Sermon Ser-mon by the minister. Theme: "A Religion of Your Own." Intermediate Christian Endeavor Endeav-or society will meet Sunday at 5:30. The Senior society will meet Sunday at 7:15 p. m. Th- Junior Christian Endeavor society will meet Monday at 4 p. in. The women's Missionary society will meet Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 at the home of Mrs. W. H. Olsen, 293 North 6 East street. Devotions will be lead by Mrs. J. G. Strickley. Miss Virgie Beelar will lead a general discussion. The Men's gymnasium class will be held this week on Thursday evening from 7 to 8 o'clock at the; Farrer junior high gymnasium. All men of the church are asked to be in attendance. The January family party will be held at the church Friday evening, at 8 p. m. All friends of the church, both young and old arc urged to be present. A fine program and games are being aria ar-ia nged by Mrs. Maisie Olsen and Mrs. Floyd Oberle. LUTHERAN CHURCH 155 NORTH FIRST WEST Sunday school and Bible class at 10 a. m. Divine services at 11 a. m. Sermon Ser-mon on Jofin 4, 27-42. Theme: "Who is Jesus Christ?" Confirmation class Tuesday evening at seven o'clock . Divine services in Spanish Fork at 2:30 p. m. A cordial welcome to all. t State Farm Bureau Poutry Convention At Salt Lake City, Jan. 22nd to 27th. inclusive. EXCURSION RATES via "Orem Line." Daily rate also stopover rates from all stations. Phone agent for further fur-ther information. SAFETY FIRST! RIDE THE BIG RED CARS IS New and Used Furniture Bargains! Used $l (PIS 0 0 5 Piece BREAKFAST SETS New Shipment (G)R All Hardwood VV3 Used COAL RANGES Large - Assortment $2450 $2f50 CONGOLEUM & EXCELLO MATTS 15x27 All Other Sizes in Stock 2 for 25 t0 $i .0 each Used Walnut DINING ROOM SUITE Buffet, Table, 4 Chairs $2)0 "WHERE YOU SAVE" 31ft WEST CENTER PHONE 25 SERVICES High Councilmen To Speak Tonight Members of the Utah stake presidency and High Council will speak in the various ward of the stake this evening, as follows: First ward J. Elmer Jacobsen, Theodore T. Taylor. Second President T. N. Taylor, Albert Mabey. Third Dr. Amos N. Merrill, Mer-rill, Le Ray Decker. Fourth Joseph A. Buttle, F. G. Warnick. Fifth Dr. Christen Jensen, W. H. Callahan. Sixth Dr. L. Weston Oaks, I. E. Brockbank. Bonneville Ralph Poulton, Prof. B. F. Larson. Lar-son. Manavu -W. Monroe Pax-man, Pax-man, Dean Gerrit de Jong, Jr. Pioneer Andrew Knudsen, David Johnson. All of the services commence at 7:30 p. m., with the exception of the Second ward .which starts at 7 o'clock. The entire musical program pro-gram in the Second ward will be furnished by the Dixon Junior high school glee club. LAKE VIEW WARD The Second ward choir will present pre-sent a sacred concert in the Lake View ward chapel this evening. R. P. MEETING Knights of Pythias of Provo will meet in regular session Monday evening at 8 o'clock at 44 West Center street. A full attendance is urged. SHARON PLAY The Sharon ward M. I. A. will present the three-act play, "Two Days to Marry," in the Pleasant View ward amusement hall Tucs-lay Tucs-lay evening at 8 o'clock. The public is invited. Brings Gandhi's Light' to U. S. mm This is not an advance man for the nudist movement, making a ellgM concession to modesty with robe and loincloth. It's a! traveling disciple of Mahatma Gandhi traveling Heht Wil liam Harrison Goodell, arriving! in New Orleans from Panama, to spread the KOSDel of "simple living" In this country. And he hopes that Americans will "loia" it fast. Jk-:-:-.ww'jE f &i X t ' A -f 1 " M. I. A. Program For Union Meeting The superintendency desires that 100 officers and teachers of the Utah stake M. I. A. be in attendance at union meeting Sunday. Sun-day. Special matters of importance will be discussed in the executive department under the leadership of Dr. Lloyd E. Oaks and Miss Grace Cheever. Bee Hive Mrs. Elsie C. Carroll Car-roll will speak to Bee Keepers.- Junior Girls Miss Jennie Campbell will present the discussion. dis-cussion. Gleaner Girls Mrs. Marion Flygare will assist in the department depart-ment work. All Gleaner class presidents and "M" Men presidents presi-dents are requested to attend this department to discuss the annual banquet and other features. Miss Elizabeth Souter will be in charge. Senior Department Directed by Elmer A. Jacob and Miss Elizabeth Lindsay in discussion of "Twentieth Century Problems." A representative from each ward is desired. Adult Department Golden Woolf of the .Fourth ward will lead the discussion. Activity departments will go forward as usual. Charles Latimer Called By Death PAYSON Charles Raoul Latimer 37, a brother of Mrs. Mina Simons of Payson, died at his home in Ncphi Thursday evening. He was born at Nephi, March 16, 1897, a son of James and Karen M. Jensen Latimer. He attended the public schools of Nephi after which he engaged in farming and stockraising with his brothers at Nephi. Surviving are four brothers and three sisters: James T. Latimer, Berkeley. California; John H., Andrew An-drew H. and David R. Latimer. Nephi; Mrs. Jeanette Killpack, Driggs, Idaho; Mrs. Mina Simons. Payson; Mrs. Elizabeth Mancuso. San Francisco, also several half brothers and sisters. The body was brought to the Deseret Mortuary in Payson and arrangements are being made for funeral services in the South ward chapel in Nephi. 25 L.D.S. Missions Represented at "Y" Twenty-five of the church's 2 missions are represented by the 122 returned missionaries registered regis-tered for the winter quarter at Brigham Young university, it was revealed Friday by Guy C. Wilson, Wil-son, head of the religious education educa-tion department of the church SChOOl. .HI in. ..... .),!.. This group includes two former mission presidents, Golden L. Woolf, French mission, and Harold Har-old Christensen, New Zealand mission. Homes of the missionaries missionar-ies are in three foreign countries. New Zealand, Mexico and Canada, and in eight western states. ewing School Free To All Sewing instructions which have been given to 45 leaders of extension ex-tension work in Utah county will be extended to every woman in the territory in a series of schools to be given in every community, according accord-ing to Alice Pcderson, county home demonstrator, who will complete com-plete the "Homemakcr" course Tuesday evening. Training in the sewing art has been going on in the school on the top floor of the city and county building since last Monday. Provo's school, to which any woman in the city is invited to come and receive instructions, will probably start next Wednesday and will be held in the same place as the county leaders' school, in the city and county building. The schools in the other communities will likely start soon, also. It is planned tenatively to hold the Provo school two or three weeks, with the sewing school open every day for any woman desiring the work. . The following women from all parts of the county received How'm I Doing, A subdued Mae West, pictured on the witness stand in a Los Angeles courtroom, lured a thrill-seeking crowd this week when , she testified testi-fied in the robbery trial of Edward Friedman, above, charged with theft of the glamorous Mae's jewels,- valued at $12,000. Her only crack "How'm I doing, boys?" - ot' big-hand. v &A '""'" V, T) W! ' ; 1 1 in in in hi urn nnin iiiii m nm .iiiiiwujul-i I f SPANISH FORK MRS. EFFIE DART Correspondent"' -F The members of the Jester's club were charmingly entertained by Miss Wilma Hansen at . .her home Thursday evening. The time was spent in sewing, and social chat. After a delicious tray luncheon lunch-eon was served several business matters were discussed and a project was decided upon. The following members were present: Misses Pat Bowen, Doris Firmage, Dona Hales. Edna Ludlow, Vivian Wilde, Agnes Hales, Hannah Vick-lund, Vick-lund, Mildred Thomas, Allie- Bow-en, Bow-en, Myrtle King, Mary Verl Simmons Sim-mons and Marva Briggs. the latter lat-ter a special guest. Complimentary, to Mrs. Annie P. Brown, the families of Mrs. Louise Brown. Mrs iLettie Patten, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E- Brqwn and Mrs. Phebe Hughes, entertained enter-tained at an informal reeption Friday, the occasion beingx the 80th anniversary of the birtif. of Mrs. Brown. opeciiti gucam the occasion were Mrs .Lucy.Mar-cusson, .Lucy.Mar-cusson, Mrs. Jane Jarvis and,1 Mrs. Mary Atwood. The other members mem-bers of the family numbering 42 were entertained ut dinner from 2 p. m. until 6 p. ni. The daughters daugh-ters and daughter-in-law serving the meals. The members of the Alta club met Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Jane Williams. Mrs. Phebe Hughes conducted community commu-nity singing; sentiment were given giv-en by members of the club, two numbers were sung by the club chorus after which a project was discussed, it was also decided to assist in maintaining the public library Ed Williams sang two solos, "West of the Great. Divide and "Utah and You"; Mrs Ruth Brockbank gave the lesson for ' the day, the subject being, "Irrigation, farming, exploring and colonisation colonisa-tion in Utah." There were 12 members and the following guests present: Mrs. Lena Williams, Mrs. Eleanor Creer. Mrs. Jane TtUe Refreshments were served byJ.nc hostess, assisted by her daughters daugh-ters Mrs. Verl White. Mrs. Mary Biri and Jane B. Williams. Honoring Miss Vera Finch whose marriage to Elmo Sumsion was an event of this week, a bride's shower was given by her sister, Mrs. Richard Bird assisted by her neice. Mrs. Frank Fams-worth Fams-worth Wednesday. The event took place at the home of the bride There were 30 aunts and cousins present. Games were en-joyed en-joyed until six o'clock when delicious tray luncheon wa. nerved The bride received many useful and beautiful gifts. George Kingsford. manager ol the Christensen chain stores left Sunday morning to attend a buy-ers buy-ers convention in Salt Lake. He will spend most of the week and Mrs. J. Angus Olsen , ancL Mr. and Mrs. Rex O. Daniel 'were dinner guests Tuesday nigh of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Fere-day Fere-day in Salt Lake City. The annual Gold and Green ba I of the Palmyra L. D. S. stake will be held Tuesday evening, Jan. M. at the Escalantc Gardens hall The Erickson-Blackwell orchestra will furnish the music Free ballpens bal-lpens will be given to all the guests. Special decorations m be featured. ...... instructions for the past week and will be leaders in the community schools : Prnvn-Emma Y. Cluff. Annie S. Huish, Bessie E. Gourley, Jennie Jen-nie W. Thomas, Eva B. Martin, Erma p. Boshard. Stella Carlson, Carl-son, Alice Carter. Ellen Christen-sen.Pernoma Christen-sen.Pernoma Richmond, Averil P. Foote, Emma Nelson, Dala Hafen, Flora Killpack, Adra R Porter, Mary Croft and Priscilla Jensen; Le'hi Jullictt E. Goates and Ruby Woolston; American Fork Mrs. E. C. Paxman and Mrs. Nellie Karren; Pleasant Grove -Bernicc S. Monson. La Vina Fugal and Hazel Kirk: Pleasant View Ina F. Lewis. Orcm Mary Ewing; Springvillc - Melissa Thompson, Martha R. Brimhall, Hilda Cherrington and Lula Sauer; Mapleton - Rebecca Hall, Luella Carpenter, Nina Harmer and Sadie N.. Whiting; Spanish Fork Jane Briggs. Rachel Gardner, Edna G. Brockbank, Brock-bank, Annie E. Nelson, Lena Williams Wil-liams and Rebecca Christensen; Payson Chasta Harirs and Ella E. Daley; Spring Lake Hortense Butler; Goshen May C. Jasper- son and Ethel Morgan. Judge?' Says Mae . . Salem Reorganizes f Ward Bishopric SALEM At a recent ward conference con-ference the Salem ward bishopric hs bee.n reorganized. Bishop Ray Davis was retained as bishop, his coJUnselors, Roscoe C. Hanks and Hit Elmer Sabin were honorably released and E. LeRoy Erickson atta Roy T. Taylor were appointed counselors in their place. The Salem ward Relief society w&s also reorganized with Mrs. Eliza Curtis, president, Mrs. Mary Davis, Mrs. Maud Edmond secretary and treasurer and Mrs. Nancy J. Sabin assistant secretary secre-tary and treasurer, all given an honorable release. Mrs. Mary Stone who had been one of the counselors to Mrs. Curtis died last summer and her place had not been filled. The new officers are Mary C. Davis, president; Eunice I. Gardner, and Ruth Oipward, first and second counselors, coun-selors, respectively and Marv Cfiristenscn, secretary and treasurer treas-urer and Mrs. Mareruerite Tavlor. assistant. SCOUT MAN LEAVES A. A. Anderson, chief exeeu-tiyc exeeu-tiyc of the Timpanogos Boy Scout counci! leaves Monday niprning for Hurricane to conduct con-duct a training course in the Zion National Park district. The course wU continue Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. EVERYTHING YOU DESIRE IN CLEANLINESS, CONVENIENCE AND COOKING RESULTS COMES TO YOU with. PHONE STORE. Observations By C. V. HANSEN HARD TIMES? Dow, Jones and Company said the other day that the American Telephone Co. will report a net income of over $136,000,000 for 1933. One George J. Mead invested $207, in the Pratt-Whitney Aircraft Air-craft company and in less than ten years drew out $8,000,000, and still retained $1,000,000 in stock. Another inexperienced young man, Charles W. Deeds invested just $40 and in less than five years was worth over $5,000,000. Smart fellow, fel-low, we say. Movie star Fay Webb Vallee, poor girl, she says she simply must have $2,000 a month for clothes, and another $1,000 every thirty days for groceries and other commodities com-modities for her house, in fact she must have $7,450 per month or she cannot get along. We wonder how many of her poor sisters in the land get along at all on what they are getting. We do not Want to be harsh in our judgment but to us it appears ridiculous. How long, O Lord, how long before there shall be a more equal distribution I among the people ''. Four years ago American h;d 513 multi-millionaires. These have decreased in number until we have only 20. These are men and women wo-men who have an annual income of over one million dollars a year. IEGTMC '' WitK'an automatic Hotpolnt Electric Riirige in your kitchen you can say goodbye forever to burdensome drudgery. You will enjoy a new freedom from cooking worries a freedom that every housewife welcomes 'f Dependability, cleanliness and unequaled convenience con-venience are advantages that only Electric Cooking can bring to you. You'll always obtain the same satisfactory, results became of the automatic heat control. You need only to place your food in the oven, set the time and temperature controls, and forget for-get it until you are ready to serve jgour meaL It is the modern way of banishing tfit atied-to-the-kitchen" feeling. Decide NOW to have an automatic Hotpoint Electric Range in your home. It is so easy to do so! Small monthly payments will take care of your purchase and you'll find, too, that our Combination Step-Down Rate makes Electric Elec-tric Cooking decidedly low in cost. US OR DROP YOU WILL POWEK EFFICIENT PUBUC SERVICE Dr. Snow Speaker At Kiwanis Club Dr. W. J. Snow of the B. Y. U spoke on "Current Economic Problems,"' at the weekly meeting of the Springville Kiwanis clut Thursday night. The non-aggression pact with South America has done more than anything in 25 years, to secure peace," he said. S. L. Mendenhall. who acted as toastmaster. explained h o w through the CWA program churches and other civic centers were now able to secure the work of artists. The club resolved, during the Two of the twenty tnke-s m between be-tween four and five million dollar's dol-lar's a year. What has become ol all these multi-millionaires in so short a time? We find some o them pone broke some are in jail a few have fled out of the country, and some have committed suicide. Surely "The wicked is fleeing when no man is pursuing." YOUR DRAPES CUSTOM MADE At I Unbelievably Low Price During Jan. and Feb. D-T-R CO. INTO OUR NEAREST NOT BE OBLIGATED SJL EECTCQ evening to cooperate with the Spanish Fork club in the interests inter-ests of the Strawberry Waterusers association. Miss Hannah Rowland and Mrs Mary Witney furnished a musical program. WAMT "You haven't seen nothing" until you see t h e 1 9 3 1 , PLYMOUTH. Soon on display at ANDERSON GAUAGE PROOF The correctness of the Chiropractic Chiro-practic principle is PROVED by the fact that when pinched nerves are relieved, the manifestations mani-festations known as rheumatism, rheuma-tism, tonsilitis. dyspepsia, eu etc.. quietly DISAPPEAR ! Consultation and Examination FREE! DR. E. L. AIKEN CHIROPRACTOR ".-) West Second North KING j |