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Show PAGE FOUR PROVO "(UTAH) ; SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY, MARCH 14 1943 uiBLday CATHOLIC CHURCH Fifth West, Second North Rev. Father Henry, O. F. M. Pastor Rev. Father Matthew, O. F. M. Assistant Sunday masses at 9 and 10:30 a. ra. Week day masses at 7 and 8 a. m. School of religion. Thursday 3:30 p. m. ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH 357 West Center Street Sunday school 10:30 a. m. Morning service 11:30 a. m. Evening service 7:45 p. m. Mid-week service Wed 7:45 p. m. Everyone 'is cordially invited to attend. Mrs. Agnes M. DeVore, acting pastor, 158 North 4th W.st. PROVO GOSPEL TABERNACIJ1: (Baptist) 80 North University Avenue Rev. Samuel D. Davis, pastor Sunday scnool 10 a. m. Morning worship 11 a. m. Young People's meeting 6:30 p. m. Evening service, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday, prayer and Bible study, 7:35 p. m. EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH Services held each Sunday at Third North and University Avenue. Worship at 3:30 p. m. and Sunday school at 2:30 p. m. The Rev. F. E. Schumann, 1024 South Fifth East, Salt Iake City, in charge, temporarily. ST. MARY'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 4G West Second North Street REV. J. W. HOWES, Pastor First and third Sundays of month; Holy Eucharist and sermon 11 a. m. Second and fourth Sundays of month; morning prayer and sermon, ser-mon, 11 a. ni. Everybody welcome. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH First Church of Christ, Scientist, Scien-tist, corner of First East and H:rst North streets. Regular Sunday Sun-day morning services. 11 o'clock, subject "Substance." Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Wednesday evening meetings are held at 8 o'clock. Reading room open Tuesdays and Thursday from 3 to 5 o'clock, excepting on holidays. COMMUNITY CHURCH Corner Second North and University Avenue Church school, 9:45 a. m. Morning seivice, 11 a. m. Sunday Niters, 6 p. m. C. E., 7 p. m. Evening service, 8 p. m. Ail Thirsr JTburs" will be the theme of the morning service. serv-ice. ' The Sunday Niters will meet ; t the Irwins, 290 N. University Avenue. Bud Robinson will lead n. E. Junior Endeavor meets Monday at 4:30. The Ladies' Aid re holding a St. Patrick's silver tea at the church Tuesday from 2:30 to" 4. A program has been planned. THIRD WARD CHOIR Members of the Third ward choir "e urred to meet for practice today to-day after Sunday school. -A full attendance is urged. C TAKE GARE OF FOR THE WE HAVE THE BEST and MOST MODERN EQUIPMENT EQUIP-MENT IN UTAH This is Good Insurance On Your Clothing; They Will Last Longer and Look Better! CASH AND CARRY PRICES Mi 3 PTTC ANTNfi anH EACH Call For and Delivery Prices Each Garment 2c IN TRADE FOR OLD HANGERS!. We Need Clothes Hangers! Wire or Wood Trade Them In! University Cleaners 170 NORTH UNIVERSITY PHONE 214 k Utah's Best Equipped Cleaning Shop Services Sacrament meetings will, be held in the L. E. S. ward chapels this evening at the usual hours. Reported programs appear below. FIRST WARD The Relief Society has arranged a special patriotic program for 7 o'clock, to honor parents of the boys in the service. SECOND WARD Tne program will be under trc direction of the Delta Phi fraternity fra-ternity of . the B. Y. U., with special speakers and music. FOURTH WARD The A-aronic priesthood quorums will be awarded the Standard Quorum award for outstanding service, and 17 Individual awaras will bt made. Lee A. Palmer of the presiding bishop's office will be present. All parents having sons in the Aaror.ic priesthood are especially invited to be present. FIFTH WARD Km :st .Paxman will present his A Cup 11a chorus at 7 o'clock, a line program having br,en planned. SIXTH WARD Jay De Graff of Heber City, and Clara .Jensen of Manti will he the speakers. Music will be "urnished. MAN A VI' WARD 'I lie Relief society has charge of the- services this evening at ").30 o'clock. A patriotic program will honor wives and mothers and tho"se in tne service. PONNEVILLE WARD A special meeting honoring the hoys in the service will be held under the direction of the Relief Society, commencing at 6:30 o'clock. The Singing Mothers will furnish the music and Mrs. Inez Allred, stake president, will be the speaker. A framed plaque bearing the names of the boys in the service will be presented to the ward, to be hung in the chapel. EIGHTH WARD A pariotic program has been prepared "America, a Christian Nation,'" showing that the American Ameri-can way of li $ is the Christian way of life. Alk families in the ward who have boys in the service serv-ice are to be especially honored. Short addresses will be given by George L. Young, Mrs. Lois Christenson and Mrs. Hazel Rob-ertsen, Rob-ertsen, an original tribute to the flag by Stanley Hall, and two choral numbers by the Relief Society So-ciety chorus, a patriotic flute solo by Juna Jorgensen, and a reading bv Sergeart "Bill" Dunford. FIRESIDE CHAT A "fireside chat" for M Men and Gleaners of Utah stake will be held this evening at 8 o'clock at the Second ward chapel. L. D. S. BAPTISM L. D. S. baptism services for boys of Utah and Provo stakes will be held at 3 p. m. today in "the Provo administration building. build-ing. The bishopric of the Fourth ward will be in charge. FIRESIDE CHAT A "fireside chat" is being held held for Bonneville ward members this evening after church at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Kay, 90 South Seventh East street. George E. Larsen of Spanish YOUR CLOTHES DURATION!! PRESSING lien's 3-Piece Suit . . Overcoat or Topcoat-Ladies' Topcoat-Ladies' Plain Dresses Plans Announced For Conference Utah stake's second guarterly, conference of 1943 will be conducted con-ducted Sunday, March 21, announces an-nounces President R. J. Mur-doek. Mur-doek. Elder1 Joseph F. Merrill of the Council of Twelve Apostles will be principal speaker at morning and afternoon general sessions. The Sunday school will be in charge of the evening session, and Stake Superintendent Sanford Bingham assures an outstanding program, including selections by an 100-voice children's chous and special speakers, including two star athleteS. The chorus will be made up from the five wards of the stake. Other musical numbers will " include in-clude a girls chorus from the Fourth ward and a solo number from Pioneer ward. Mrs. Da-Costa Da-Costa Clark is directing the children's chil-dren's chorus, with Dr. Gerrit de Jong, Jr., at the organ and Beth Martin as piaryst. Highlighting several interesting interest-ing talks will be those by Reed E. Nilsen and Rand Clark, star athletes for BYU and Provo high school, respectively. Elna Love-land, Love-land, Beth Williams, Betty Jean Curtis, and Helen Gardner will also speak briefly and a panel group from the Third ward, directed di-rected by Lester P. Taylor, will discuss what the Sunday school has to offer a future member of the armed forces. Concluding speaker, Harry Mob- ley, a friend of the church, will talk briefly about the "Mormon" Sunday school. The entire program pro-gram is under direction of the stake superintendncy, stake board, and stake junior Sunday school supervisors. The public is invited. in-vited. Reflection of Deity Is Seen In Creation "Substance," is the subject of the Christian Science lesson-sermon on Sunday, March 14th. Included from the Bible are these qitations: "Am I a God at hand, saith the Lord, and not a God afar off? Do not I fill heaven and earth ? saith the Lord." (Jeremiah 23: 23-24). The following correlative passages pas-sages are from Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, Scrip-tures, by Mary Baker Eddy: "Thr substance, Life, intelligence, Truth, and Love, which constitute Diety, are reflected by His creation; crea-tion; and when we subordinate the false testimony of the corporeal cor-poreal senses to the facts' of Science, we shall see this, true likeness and reflection everywhere." every-where." (P. 516:4-8). . Fork will be the speaker and Miss Laurel Baird will furnish exylophone selections and Eugene rvay win sing. t r .,, Mr. and Mrs. Kav. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Clegg. Mr. and Mrs La Veil A. Killpack and Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Carter are hosts and hostesses. a I TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS 1 USED Kelvinator refrigerator. Ralp'h Radio, 65 North Univer sity. Phone 618. m!4 USED vanity dresser and bench. 641 East 8th North. ml4 USED electric 032R4. range. Phone ! ml7 U?D. s ?Hran5. cots' cal1 at 641 East 8 North, before Monday noon. ' ml4 FOR SALE REAL ESTATE 9 acres land west on 5 North. 5 acres fall plowed. Fine for garden or subdivision. C. H. Davies. Phone 09 Jl, Route 1, Box 359. ml6 3 ROOM house to be moved from property, Herbert Dangaard, 10 South 6 East Springville. ml4 WANTED TO RENT 3 OR 4 room furnished apartment apart-ment or small furnished - house. Call Geo. Roderick. Phone 1690W. ml6 FOR SALE CARS MODEL A 1930 Ford coupe, excellent ex-cellent motor, tight body, must sell today. Call between 2 and 4 p. m. 115 West 4 North. ml4 WANTED TO BUY OR RENT, small pasture. Phone 662 or 162. ml6 SMALL home made trailer. Write Route 1, Box 16, American Fork. ml9 HELP WANTED FEMALE EXPERIENCED waitress. Apply Sutton Cafe. ml9 IIEL WANTED MALE EXPERIENCED male cook. Apply Ap-ply Sutton Cafe. . ml9 FOR RENT TRAILER HOUSE, 18 foot, suitable for living. liv-ing. Phone 042R3. ' ml6 . '-' LOST WILL party that took overcoat by mistake from Haase Cafe Friday night please return to ' owner at 597 North University. Reward. ml4 RlI'Er " Ms t Using picks and shovels American soldiers fill a crater resulting from a Nazi air raid on Casablanca. As the hole is being filled, hose "nps Dumo off water from a broken main. Pioneer Ward to Hear J Mendelssohn Chorus Tonight's program at the Pioneer Pio-neer ward chapel will be presented pre-sented bjr the Mendelssohn male chorus; invocation; "Bless This House," chorus; sacrament; "On the Sea," chorus; solo, "O My Father," Mrs. No la Nilsson; "Steal Away," .spiritual; "Beautiful "Beauti-ful Dreamer," chorus; bass solo, Claude Robbins; "Song of Peac" chorus; reading, "Prayer for America," Am-erica," Mrs. Arte. Ballif; "God Bless America," "Your Land and My Land," chorus; benediction. E4vis Terry is the conductor and Miss Lucille Dyring, accom- " lr1tWr- I'""' mum i in wpiju.ii i w h n I Mwtw The many thousands of depositors in banks of the First Security Corporation System are regularly sending, individually, indi-vidually, into the light their dollars through purchase of War Bonds and Stamps In. addition, a high II banks are also being In fact, since Pearl Harbor, holdings of these banks in U. S. Government Securities have been increased by more than 53 million dollars. First Security Banks will continue to the full limit of their ability, to increase their holdings of Government Securities, and to sell -more and more War Bonds and Stamps to others, until the war is won. We urge all First Security depositors to invest at least lO9 of income in War Savings Bonds and Stamps. FIRST SECURITY BANIjL OF UTAH National Association " - With branches; at Ogden, Provo, Logan, Brigham City, Bingham, Magna, Richmond, .Park City FIRST NATIONAL BANK -Of Salt Lake City Up J3 j ... ' V-. W Relief Society Officer to Speak Belle Smith Spafford of the first presidency of the :!ational Relief Society, and editor of the Relief Society Magazine, will be the speaker at the Sharon stake community religious service -this evening at the Scera auditorium at 7:45 p. m. Mrs. Spafford will speak on Relief Society work, its place in the present emergency, and plans ior the future, and the music will be furnished by the Sirging Mothers of Sharon stake, i unHor tho Hi rant irvn rf XTi l ci r Tli rectors Jennie Farley and Melba p. pyne. It is fitting for the Re- lief Soceity to be in charge of - MORE Additional First Security Deposit Dollars Went to War During 1942 percentage of their deposits in these invested to help finance the BANKS OF THE FIRST SECURITY CORPORATION With branches at Sugarhouse and Tooele FIRST SECURITY BANK Rock Springs Wyo. MEMBERS OF . FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Tributes Paid 'To Benjamin Bachmah Largely attended funeral services serv-ices for Benjamin Bachman, well known, Provo. resident for many years ivere held' in the Seventh ward chapel Friday afternoon, with Bishop Wesley P. Lloyd presiding. pre-siding. Miss Felice Kartchner was at the organ to play the prelude and postlude, also, she favored with an organ solo. . Walter P. Whitehead opened with prayer, Mrs. Be mice Das-trup Das-trup sang two solps, accompanied by Mrs. Zenith oJhnson, and the address was delivered by Thomas N. Taylor. Mayor Maurice Harding Hard-ing closed with prayer and the dedication of the grave at the Provo City Burial park was by I. E. Brockbank. Honorary pallbearers were H. G. Bldmenthal, Joseph Cheever, 1. E. Smoot, Preston G. Peterson, Peter-son, William M. Wilson and Bert Hedquist. Mrs. Gladys Balser Mrs. Gladys Ann Munk Balser, 41, died Saturday morning at the family home, Route 1, Box 323. She was born November 7, 1901 in Manti, daughter of Christen and Mary Keller Munk. She married mar-ried Leo S. Balser January 1, 1923 at Price and later in the Manti temple, March 23, 1937. She was an active member of the L. D. S. church. Surviving are her husband, one daughter, Lois Harward of Provo: Pro-vo: two sons, Kenneth and Allen Balser; 'her mother of Manti; three sisters, Ellen Crawford and Ruth Peterson of Manti, and Edna Nielson of Ephraim, and three brothers, Kenneth and Leonard of Salt Lake City, . and Dr. Ray Munk of Manti. The body is at the Claudin funeral fu-neral home. this meeting, as the one hundred and first anniversary of the organization or-ganization will be observed this week throughout the church. THAN 53 Loans war effort. Municipal Secur5ti,es. Capital: 1 Common Preferred Deaths Andrew Edwards Andrew Edwards, 77, well known farmer of Utah and Idaho, died Firday at his home 562 West Sixth North street, of ailments incident to age. Mr. Edwards, who had been blind for the past 13 years, had been in poor health since 1933," when he was injured in-jured in an automobile accident. He was. born on September 15, 1856, in Millville, a son of Esaias and Bilinda Milles Edwards. He followed farming, and married mar-ried Elizabeth Hamblin on October Octo-ber 12, 1892, in the Logan L. D. S. temple. She died on March 29, 1912, in" Enterprise. Later he moved to Carey, Idaho. He married mar-ried Lora Coons on May 12, 1918 in the Salt Lake L, D. S. temple. They farmed in Carey in the summer, but lived in Provo during dur-ing the winter until 1920, when they returned to this city to make their permanent home. He was a high priest in the L. D. S. church at the time of his death. Surviving besides his widow, are five children by his first marriage. mar-riage. Hayes Edwards of Jerome Idaho; Mrs. Vera Klei of Picabo Idaho; Lafelle Edwards of Carey! Idaho; Isiah Edwiards, in the United Stages army, stationed at Camp Hales, Colo., and Mrs. Vel-ma Vel-ma Wulfenstein of St. George; three stepchildren, Roland Mc-Quivey Mc-Quivey and Theodore McQuivey of Provo and Mrs. Nellie Hol-man Hol-man of American Fork, 'and 16 grandchildren. Funeral, services are being arranged ar-ranged by the Deseret mortuary. Lester Phillips LEHI Lehi relatives received word Wednesday of the death of Lester Phillips, 57, in an army camp in California. He was buried in California. He was a son of the late Levi Phillips of Lehi, ard spent his youth in Lehi. MI LLION Evidence of Constant Growth and Increasing In-creasing Security of Baitks of the First Security Corporation System Consolidated Statement As of December 31. 1942 RESOURCES and Discounts Banking Houses, Furniture & Fixtures Investment Bonds and Securities Stock in Federal Reserve Bank Real Eestate Owned Other Assets Cash and in Banks $53,289,112.75 U. S. Treas. D-ir. & Guar; Bills & Notes 23.549,673.34 U. S. Gov't Dir. & Guar. Bonds 55,817,157.03 and Listed Total Resources LIABILITIES $ Surplus Undivided Irofits Reserve for Contingencies Reserve for Taxes, Interest, Expense, etc Other Liabilities Demand Deposit $131,115,431.69 Time Deposits 30,225.989.90 Total Liabilities SYSTEM FIRST SECURITY BANK OF IDAHO National Association With branches at Boise, Pocatello, Blackfoot, Em-mett, Em-mett, Gooding, Hdiley, Idaho" Falls, Jerome, Mont-pelier, Mont-pelier, Mountain Home, Nampa, Payette, Preston, Rexburg, St. Anthony, Shoshone. FIRST SECURITY TRUST CO. Salt Laker City . . William L. Hoffman V PLEASANT GROVE William L. Hoffman, 82, died at his home in this city Thursday afternoon, of causes incident to age. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday Sun-day at 3:30 p.m. in the First LDS ward chapel, with Junius A. West, bishop, in charge. Friends, may call at the family home in Pleasant Grove on the day of the services. He was born in Echterdingein, Germany, October 23, 1860, a son of George Frederick and Johanna Welsh Hoffman. He came to the United States in the year 1878, living for a short time in Ohio. He married Pauline Feyle on April 2, 1883, and they moved to Utah in 1886. He later wenk to Montana where he followed the occupation of miner. In the year 1919, he went to Widtsoe, Utah, where he lived, until seven years ago, when he moved to Pleasant Grove. He is survived by " eight sons and daughters: Mrs. Dora Dickert " of Helena, Mont.; William F. Hoffman of Stevensville, MonL.; Mrs. R. L. Hunter of Yakima, Wash.; Fred Hoffman of Pleasant Pleas-ant Grove; Chris Hoffman of Spanish Fork; Mrs. Margaret Fountain of Lindon; Mrs. Matilda Ma-tilda Nelson of Sal.ina, and Roy Hoffman of Draper; 23 grandchildren grand-children and 13 great-grandchildren and two sisters, Mrs. Charles White of Cleveland Ohio, and Mrs. Charles Benz of Dayton, Ohio. Burial will be in the Pleasant Grove cemetery under the direction direc-tion of Olpin Brothers mortuary. Dell B. Djmick LAKE SHORE Funeral services serv-ices for Dell B. Dimick. 14. son of Elwood E. and Edna Betts Dimick of Lake Shore will be held Sunday at 2 p. m. in the Lake Shore ward chapel. Friends may call prior to the services at the home Mrs. David Dimick, a grandmother. Burial will be in the Provo cemetery. A $ 31,527,536.98 1,768,411.56 64,611.50 168,650.00 21.V07.31 202,322.40 4,865,710.81 137,521.653.93 $171,274,593.68 $3,275,000.00 2,921,000.00 3,229,000.00 46,000.00 1,299,706.58 1,976,662.03 411,524.68 49,278.80 161,341,421.59 $171,27,593.68 A X f J, r,& |