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Show PA'GE EIGHT j . I,- . - SfC To Speak Here SUNDAY SERVICES i I COMMUNITY CHURCH Corner 2nd X. and University avenue Edwin F. Irwin, Minister. Sunday school 10 a. m. Church 11 a. m. Young people's meeting 7 p. m. The theme of the morning service ser-vice will be "By-products of Struggle." Francie Harris will be the leader of the Young People's meeting. The Lndios Aid will meet on Tuesday at the church at 230 p. m. Next Sunday will be homecoming home-coming Sunday. The morning ser-vic1 ser-vic1 will be followed by a covered dish luncheon. It i.s hoped that all these who have been interested in the church in the past and tho.se who are now interested will co i;ir and enjoy the fellowship of this day together. ST. MAHYS EPISCOPAL ." West Second North Sunday. October 4, the seventeenth seven-teenth Sunday after trinity. Evening Eve-ning vesper service with sermon .at 4 o'clock by the Rev. John Hy lop of Salt Lake City, -.-t in charge. All aie welcome Itteild. SIXTH WARD A. M. Anderson will be the speaker at the Sixth ward sacrament sacra-ment meeting this evening at 6:30 o'clock. Special music will be furnished by the choir, under un-der the direction of Miss Marguerite Mar-guerite Jepperson. W. pri- to M. I. A. ORGANIZED SPRING VILLE Reorganization Reorganiza-tion of the Third ward Y. M. M. I. A. is announced with the appointment ap-pointment of Lewis Harmer, superintendent; super-intendent; Merle Sergeant and Virgil Bird, counselors. The retiring retir-ing officers are Glenn Hanson, Lore 11 Johnson and Lewis Harmer. PRIMARY HOMECOMING Tfie Sixth ward Primary homecoming home-coming will be held Monday at 4 o'clock in the ward amusement hall. All children of the ward are :n vited. SPERRY TO VRITE COMMENTARY ON OLD TESTAMENT KEORGANIZED CHURCH I'M West Fourth South Regula: Sunday services at tho Reorganized church. Sunday .school at lt a. in, preaching at 11 ..' ioi k Kdward Moe. elder in CATHOLIC ( III K( II 170 North Fifth West I -':it her Henry Stendelach Sunday masses at 7:30 and 9:30 a. iv. at the Provo Catholic church SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST 'Sabbath school 9:45-10:4") Sat- av 1 'reaching at 11 oiIocK. Ail . t ; i o 1 1 : e . Ul CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHI RCH 1-n-t Churvh of Christ, Scientist, Scien-tist, eoriiei of First East and Firt Norm streets. Regular Sunday morning services. 11 o'clock, subject sub-ject "Unreality." Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Wednesday evening meetings aie held at S o'clock. Reading room open daily from 2:30 to l 30 o'clock, excepting Suno .y-- and holidays. Ll'THERAN CHURCH 15u North First West K. Skov, pastor Sunday school at 10:15 a. m. Setm..:. at 11:00 a. m. Seimon The Real Relation Exist-i:.i; Exist-i:.i; Between the Old and the New Te.-.tument." A ointu,! welcome to all. ELIZABETH WHITE GALLED BY DEATH f - i ' :.:n :: Sty, ft PAYSON- Mrs. Elizabeth Laird Yhite 73 widow of George White, e i tier noine in Goshen Friday n.oiru-.g from infirmities of age. She was born August 31. 1863 in Glasgow. Scotland, a daughter of Robert and Elizabeth Jopp Laird. She came to Utah with her parents par-ents when nine years old and has resided in Goshen since that time. She was married to Mr. Wnite m lv-,3 and he died in 1S27. Surviving are three sons and o--,e daughter. Delbeit. John and -t W hite and Mrs. Cleo Miller, r.. 13 gi andchddren; one Mrs. Agnes Ha.n.en. Black-Id Black-Id i ho. r. eial services will be con-d con-d Sunday at 2 p. m. in with Bishop William . a officiating. Interment will tiie Goshen cemetery under 'm :: of the Claudir. Funeral Km. ;..si: -ISte !o. F' ' ." l ( t ( iost Tho: tie ;: Latter-day Saint views of the Old Testament will oe gathered into a book now being written by Dr. Sidney B. Sperry. associate professor pro-fessor of religious education at Brigham Young university. He plans to have the rough draft finished by spring. To determine fully wnat Joseph Smith, prophet of the church, meant when he said "We believe the Bible to be the word of God as far as it i.s translated correctly," correct-ly," Dr. Sperry has been doing much research. He feels that t'ne revelations and philosophy of the church demand an interpretation of the Old Testament that is unique in many respects to the commonly aeeepied views of modern mod-ern critics To present that Inter In-ter pietat ion is hisobiecl m writing I ne book . "It would be more correct to call the Old Testament the 'Old Covenant' Cov-enant' because the latter phrase-better phrase-better represents its spirit throughout," he said in the course of his discussion of several matters mat-ters of translation. Dr. Sperry has planned the book for a long time. He has studied at the University of Cnicago and in Palestine under some cf the greatest Bible scholars of the world. He took his M. A. at Chicago Chi-cago in 191?d and his Ph. D. there m 1931. He also uiu graduate work at the American School ot Oriental Research. Jerusalem. Eventually ne hopes to write 1 three other volumes, one giving j the L. D. S. view of the New Testament, another on the major-pi major-pi opiiets, and the third on the '.minor prophets. Dr. Sperry's mastery mas-tery of Hebrew helps 'him greatly ' in Biblical r esear ch. PIANO RECITAL TO BE HELD TUESDAY ; Elmer E. Nelson, special in-! in-! structor in piano at Brigham ; Young university, will present nine ! students in a recital in College ; hall beginning at 8:15 p. in.. October Oc-tober S. Gustave Bugger t. cellist of the music faculty, will assist. The program follows: "La Traviata Fantasia." Maur-. Maur-. ine Nelson "The Fauns." Burned i Skinner. "Impromptu in C s'harp ; Minor ," Evelyn Peck, i a ) "Scherzo j in E Minor," ibi "Malaguena," Mrs. Benjamin Franklin, above, who is coming to Provo to speak Tuesday at 4 p. m. at the Women's club house under the auspices of the Provo Women's Republican club. NOTED WOMAN TO SPEAK HERE Under the auspices of the Women's Wo-men's Republican club of Provo and Utah, Mrs. Ben Franklin of Topeka. Kansas, will speak at the Women's clubhouse Tuesday at -1 p. m. Everyone is invited. Mrs. Franklin is Said to be an accomplished ac-complished speaker and has been active in Kansas politics for many yea i.s. She is the wife of Benjamin Ben-jamin Franklin, state business manager. She has bad wide training train-ing in public appearance, having served as one of the lecturers, oi gaineis and directors lor the Plavgoeis League, Inc.. of New York. She graduated from the University Univer-sity of California where she won distinction as a debater, later becoming be-coming a speaker on the Chautauqua Chautau-qua platform. SELKflH SERVICES SET FOR SUNDAY PAYSON Funeral services for Mrs Emetz Richmond Selman, widow of William Selman, who died Wednesday in Los Angeles, will be conducted Sunday at 4 p. rn. in the First Ward L. D. S. chapel. The bodv will be at the home of her sister, Mrs. Jack Dixon on North Main street until the time of the service. Interment will be in the Payson City cemetery under the direction of the Claudin Funeral Home. CHOIR TO ATTEND FUNERAL SERVICES Second ward choir- members are requested to be at the church and ready to leave for the John A. Vance funeral today at 12:30 o'clock. Services are to be held in the Sharon ward chapel at 1 o'clock, and the Second ward choir will furnish the music. n Elaine Smith. "Humoreske," Orpha York. Cello solos, uu "Harlequin." ibi "Hungarian Rhapsody." Gustave Buggert. "Rondo Brilliante," Marion Nelson. iai "Polonaise in C Minor," ibi "Hungarian Rhapsody No. 11," Helen Johnston. Concerto in A Minor, first movement), Florence SPANISH FORK TO Liebestrau Delienne Jensen. Todd. HOLD JAMBOREE ; Hopes to Cross Atlantic in Barrel o! t n , n c lig!:' o: ; tla ov. hu: . Wll. tr.-e stur is i Chr teli to I ANISH FORK Boy Scouts. I.- Palmyra district are plan-; tor a hsg c a 1 1: ; f i !" program , -. race track. The following run Wll be presented: Torch ( parade commencing, at Sec- j North and ending at the rice; -: Each scout will make his torch out of green stick.- and ip wired on to the stick. Oil : furnished. At the race; k every scout w:li present a t and a mu.-ical number. It lanned to nave either Mr. .-opherson or Mr'. Anderson a storv. Scouts are reoueste a et at the city par k at 7:30 LXKCKNY THIAL SET Beit Conklin and Leonard Bar-new Bar-new who pleaded not guilty to a charge of petty larceny in city court Saturday morning wen- ; . t to appear for "trial October 21 and released without bond. The complaint com-plaint was filed by Inez Curtis FISTULA Every person suffering from Fistula. Piles or other rectal trouble is urged to write The Thornton & Minor Clinic, Suite 2016. 926 McGee -St., Kansas City, Mo., for their free book which explains ex-plains what complications may develop de-velop if these treacherous afflictions afflic-tions are neglected. This valuable book has been prepared by a noted authority on rectal and colonic diseases dis-eases and gives full details of the mild Thornton & Minor methods by which more than 46,000 patients pa-tients have been treated in the past 58 years. (adv). In a big oak barreL "powered" only by a square sail on a 10-foot mast, Ernest Biegajski, upper left, proposes to sail the Atlantic ocean to Southampton, Eng. The larger photo shows Biegajski atop his strange craft in Buffalo, N. Y where he planned to start a test cruise on Lake Erie to Cleveland prior to the ocean trip. Bundles of cork on the sides and stern of the barrel keep it pn even keeL Steering gear is on the inside. We (Go tWh ait we Wanted o o o EM TO Why Drive Opt Oime f ProWs Eiggesft Payro o o us am vevic ooos TTT iters? Ivong before a city light plant could be built in Provo, our citizens, will be enjoying en-joying the new 5c top residential lighting rate of the Power Company. This will ,-rive our city one of the lowest electric rates in the United States. Why should we now take on an $850,000 debt, after we got what we wanted LOW ELECTRIC RATES? Consider jthis: We now have low rates, lower than any municipal plant could ever bring us. Besides we can still keep the division offices of the Power Company Com-pany and its 105 citizen-employes and its $200,000 annual expenditures. The People's Committee believes it would be an outrage to drive these employes from our city. With them would go their families and dependents. Such a move would greatly injure our city. More important, many of these employes own their invn homes; many of them are members of our pioneer families. They want to remain re-main in Provo. WARNING! An attempt is being made to distract you from the real issues is-sues in Provo. On October 13 you won't be voting on what "might" have happened in Timbuctoo or Algiers, or some othei far-off place. You will be voting on two ordinances, providing for an $850,000 bonded debt for another electric plant in Provo! The expose of the Piqua hoax proves you can't depend on '"he "green pasture" stories. When you investigate the "pasture," "pas-ture," it isn't green at all. The provisions of the two or dinances are just as important ir the question of the $850,000 debt. When the promoters, tell you about some far - off ci ty, ask them if these cities passed the same ordinances, and their severe terms, written out-of-town engineers and bond bankers. IF THESE HAND-PICKED 'GREEN PASTURE' TOWNS, TALKED ABOUT BY THE PROMOTERS, HAD TO SWALLOW SWAL-LOW THE TWO ORDINANC ES SUBMITTED TO US FOR VOTE ON OCTOBER 13, THEY WOULD HAVE OVERWHELMINGLY OVER-WHELMINGLY DEFEATED MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP. Do What Is Best For All Provo Vote Against the $850,000 Bond Issue By Voting "Against " Both Ordinances PEOPLE'S COMMITTEE OPPOSED TO $850,000 BONDED DEBT G. OTT ROMNEY, Chairman ORVEL BONNETT, Secretary |