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Show jgnaa: ;" - n The fur eayh man to settle is mt what he would do if he had mean-.- , time, influence, and educational advantages, but what he will do with the things he has. que-tiu- n Hamilton Wright Mabie Bt$tcm$t;i?iit;?:i:;:t:i?:::tK8UutitH!:i::a;::::::::::::::fl Volume Four Number Sports Twenty-Eig- . . . AND- - Recreation (By PARLELL PETERSON) Softball schedules were planned to get underway last Monday but die to inclement weather and the rush of Conference the leagues will not start till next Monday, June 16. The days scheduled for each league are as follows: Mondays and Wednesdays, Elders and M Men; Tuesdays and Thursdays, Gleaner Girls; Thursdays, Primary day; Fridays, Scouts; and Saturdays, Junior and Beehive girls. For the first half all games are scheduled to get underway at 6:00 p. m. For the second half when the days start to get shorter the time will be moved ahead. There has been some discussion about rhanging the Elders and M Men play to Saturdays. This ahlft ran easily he made If the teams find that day more convenient. If there Is any sentiment for this change please contact Parlell Peterson at the Seminary building. Mr. Peterson will also contact each ward concerning home games. FIRST HALF SCHEDULES ELDERS and M. MEN Monday, June 16. Edgemont vs Sharon Wednesday, June 1ft Pleasant View vs Vineyard Timpanogos vs Ivike View Monday, June 2.1 Edgemone vs Pleasant View Wednesday, June 25 Vineyard vs. Timpnaogos Sharon vs Lake View Monday, June 80 Edgemont vs. Vineyard Wednesday, July 2 Sharon vs Timpanogos Pleasant View vs Lake View Monday, July 7 Edgemont vs Timpanogos Wednesday, July 9 Vineyard vs Lake View Sharon vs Pleasant View Monday, July 14 Edgemont vs Lake View Wednesday, July 16 Sharon vs Vineyard Pleasant View vs Timpanogos. GLEANER Including Orem, the Business Section of the Sharon District PROVO UTAH, R. F. D. THURSDAY. JltNE 12. 1941 ht Plans Completed For Sharon Stake Conference t- Sharon vs Vineyard Thursday, July 1 7 Pleasant View vs. Timpanogos. SCOUT LEAGUE Friday, June 20 Edgemont vs Sharon Pleasant View vs Vineyard Timpanogos vs Lake View Friday, June 27 Edgemont vs Pleasant View Vineyard vs Timpanogos Sharon vs Lake View ' Frdiay, July 4 Edgemont vs Vineyard Sharon vs Timpanogos Pleasant View vs Lake View Friday, July 11 Edgemont vs Timpanogos Vineyard vs Lake View Sharon vs Pleasant View. Friday, July 1R Edgemont vs Lake View Saturday Evening will be devoted to priesthood work In the stake, and will be held In the Timpanogos ward chapel, with President Sidney H Cluff conducting the meeting Two dramatizations will feature the session, first by the Second Elders quorum, presenting a typical ward priesthood quorum meetd ing, in which Luzell Robbins, E. Pyne, George Rohbock, and J. Frampton Colling will lead; second, a ward welfare committee meeting will be dramatized, with Bishop Lynn Taylor, of Pleasant View, and Orson Prestwioh, Nellie D. Snow, and Charles H. Poulson, Between dramatizadirecting. tions Elder Victor C. Anderson will discuss the subject of recreation as a vital part of ward activities. HARVEY BOOTH Aaronic Priesthood Workers will get major attention at the first session on Sunoay which opens in the Seminary building at 8:30 a. m. This will be a special leadership session for ail Aaronic priesthood workers, and stake authorities ask that all members of the high council, all bishoprics in the stake, and all ward and stake Aaronic priesthood advisers and leaders be present. Sunday at 10 A. M. and 2 P. M. will be held the two general sessions of the conference. Both will be in the Lincoln high school auditorium. These two meetings will he addressed by Bishop Richards, and the entire stake membership is urged to attend. M.I.A. Session will be held at 7:30 p. m, Sunday, with all ward M. I. A. meetings being postponed so that attendance may be allowed at the stake meeting under M. I. A. direction. regular monthly meeting of the 123rd quorum of seventies has been postponed for one week. Officers-meetin- 8:00 a. bers at a good officers will convene at m. and for quorum mem9:00 a. m. June 22 when attendance is desired by of the quorum. vs Lake View Saturday, June 2ft Tjlcemont vs Pleasant View Vinevard vs Timpanogos Sharon vs Lake View Saturday, July 5 Edgemone vs Vineyard Sharon vs Timpanogos Pleasant View vs Lake View (Continued in next column) TV0 as a son. Surviving also are one brother. Edwin R. Booth and five sisters. Mrs J. Lloyd Woodruff. Mrs Vienna B. Kimball, and Mrs. II A. Cowan of Los Angeles, Mrs S. C. Adams and Mrs. I. E. Brock-ban- k of Provo. The Windsor ward entered the float entitled "This is the Place" day festival. Flag Day 1 i RODNEY KIMBALL Bishop of Grand View C. Rodney Kimball is a Bon of Crozier and the late Mary Roberts Kimball. He was born at St. 1910. David, Arizona, Feb. 13, He is the fifth child of a family of 10 children. The family later moved to Salt Lake county where he attended Jordan high school and seminary, at Sandy. Dun.ig his senior year he was student and graduated body president, with honors as the best man in the school, receiving a medal for this distinction. He also pot his letter in football, C. all-rou- basketball, track and baseball. Later he attended U. S. A. C. at Logan, but accepted a call to tho German Austrian mission the next year, filling this appointment from November 1930 until June 1933, four months of which time he served as district president. After his return from Germany he moved to Santa Ana, Cal. where he became active in church work, gprvirg as first assistai t In the Sunday School, and later as second counselor In the bishopric of that ward. Rtturnlng to Utah they settled In Grand View ward, where he has served as Sunday School superintendent until the time of this new He has been emappointment. ployed at L. Y. U. during the past four years as athletic trainer and equipment custodian, and has finished three years of his college June I AM AN AMERICAN These rights and privileges are mine: g. means. I have the right to a prompt trial by jury, if I should be accused of a crime. I may seek justice in the courts where I have equal Saturday, July 12 ' with others. rights vs Timpanogos Edgemont I have the privilege of sharing in the benefits of many Vineyard vs Lake View Sharon vs Pleasant View of the natural resources of my country. Saturday, July 19 I may educate my children in free schools. Edgemont vs Lake View I have the right to worship as I think best. Sharon vs Vineyard I have the right to "life, liberty and the pursuit of Pleasant View vg Timpanogos. Call 060R1 or 02J2. C. II. POULSEN, Manager. Richard Nimer. Ronald Hansen, Dee Anderson, Osbnrn Carter, Gaile Loveless, and Royden Carter. Closing date for entrants Is Monday, June 16. Awards are to be made in both the singles A girls tourand douhies play, nament will be run off at a later date. The Scera recreation staff Is scheduled to make a broadcast over station KOVO Monday, June 16 at 2 00 p. m. enocerning the summer recreation program. 4 First Counselor Ozias Harvey Harward Is the eighth child in a family of 14 children, a son of Ozias Strong Harward and Francis Eva Curtis Harward. He was born in Aurora, Sevier county, Utah, and early learned the lessons of work and Until 1934 the family service. remained in Sevier county, where he served in many church capacities, from president of the Deacon's quorum, to one of the presidents of the 107th Quorum of Seventy; also as a stake missionary, in Sunday School and M I A. mission presidencies, and filled r- - in South Africa. Since 1934 he Provo and Grand has lived in View, and has continued his services to his church, being six years in M. I. A. work, and also working with the Aarnoie priesthood quorums, and later as a member of the bishopOrlando Jolley ric with Bishop and LeRoy Taylor. work He married LeN'eve Martin in of January, 1934, a daughter David and Ruby Baird Martin, in the Salt Lake temple. They havt three children, Slyvia, aged 4, C. Rodney Jr., 3 years, and Larry Robert, 1 year. PRIMARY FLAY 14 - run-pin- I1ARWARD O. HARVEY JOHN M. NICOL Second Counselor John M. Nicol is a son of C. Nicol and the late Isabella Murdock Nicol. He was born June 20, 1912 in Duchesne, but moved from there with his family at age 9 years, settling in the Pioneer ward in Provo. They lived Hy-ru- m there for 12 years where John active in school and church activities, being president of the Student body at Provo high school, and valedictorian at his graduation from the Provo seminary. He graduated from Provo high school that same year, receiving honors In athletics. In 1933 the family moved to Grand View where John has served as scout master since 1934, and as second counselor to Doan Buckner in the M. I. A. and as secretary of the First Elders' quorum for two years. He is also a Master M Man, and was class president one year. In 1938 he became pres'dent of the ward M. I. A,, and has served on the stake mission during the past year, a position he relinquished to become a member of the ward bishopric. He married Margaret Nuttail in June 1936 in the Salt Lake temple, and they have two sons. They recently moved into their new home. He works at the Pacific States Pipe company as a moulder in the brass foundry, a 7 Job he has held for the past years. became PROGRAM BEGINS I may think as I please; I may speak or write as I please, so long as I do not wtih the rights of others. interfere NOTICE! I have the right to vote. By my vote I choose the pubIndustries Sharon Canning lic officers who are really my servantsPlant will can berries and vegetI have the right to choose my work, to seek any job for ables on Friday, June 13 and on which my experience and ability have fitted me. any other day they have such I have the right to try to improve my lot through various produce sufficient to justify h, Timpanogos Funeral services for Richard Harvey Booth of Edgemont will be held at the ward chapel Friday at 1 30 p. m. with Bishop Vilford R Stubbs in charge. g resiMr. Booth was a dent of Provo, being born on May 6, 1884 in Provo, a son of Judge John Edge and Maria Josephine He received his Harvey Booth. education in Provo city schools, and aT Brigham Young university He was a farmer by vocation, but assisted in the survey by H. A. Stewart of the Uintah basin many years ago. He was a high priest in the Sharon stake at time of his death, and has served actively on many church positions, in the Sundav School, the M. I A., the genealogical committee, and also as a missionary to New Zealand. He was also active in civic and educational work, serving as deputy sheriff and as Alpine school board member. He married Cordelia Olsen Dorlus on June 23, 1909 in the Manti temple. She survives and two daughters. Mrs. R. George Hill and Miss Josephine Booth At the home also is a nephew. Leland Dorlus whom they raised Zora Hansen was in charge. Due to Stake Conference being held next Sunday, June 15, the Unique as an organization devoted to recreation, not only in this land, but likely the most distinctive of its kind in the world, Scera received volumes of praise and emulation during the past week when more than 50 recreational leaders from all parts of Utah county, Juab, Wasatch, and other parts of Utah gathered at Orem for an entire week of training under state sponsorship, headed by Verne B. Thorpe, supervisor of WPA recreation, and Jena V. Holland, assistant. SHARON FOLKS EIIJOY at the Strawberry Notice to Seventies Scera Program Praised By Recreational Leaders FUNERAL FRIDAY life-lon- We would like to see Grand View ward combine with some other ward that has a scarcity of players in some of the leaguefso that all seven of the wards will be participating In the summer recreation program in softball. Tennis champions in Orem will be decided next week when the Orem City championship tournament takes place. Play Is schedJune 20. uled to start Friday, Sharon vs Vineyard KitArlo so Include far Entrants vs View Pleasant Timpanogos chen, Cullen Christensen, Bobby Leo Farn-wortJUNIOR AND BEEHIVE GIRTH Foutin, Leo Vernon, Saturday, June 21 Edgemont vs Sharon Pleasant View vs Vineyard H Bishop LeGrande Richards of the Presiding Ei&hopric of the L. D. S. church is expected to preside over the Sharon stake quarterly conference to be held Saturday evening and all day Sunday, announaes President A. V. Watkins of the Sharon stake under whose general direction. the conference sessions will be held. GIRL SCHEDULE Tuesday, June 17 Edgemont vs Sharon Pleasant V'ew vs Vineyard Thursday, June Ilk Timpanogos vs Lske View Tuesday, June 24 Vineyard vs Timpanogos Sharon vs Lake View Thursday, June 26 Edgemort vs Pleasant View Tuesday, July 1 Edgemont vs Vineyard Sharon vs Timpanogos Thursday, July SPleasant View vs. Lake View Tuesday, July ft Vineyard vs Lake View Sharon vs. Pleasant View Thursday, July 10 Edgemont vs Timpanogos Tuesday, July 15 Edgemont vs Lake View SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 per year in advance I AM AN AMERICAN These duties I share with my fellow citizens: It It The Primary play program began Monday with a large attendance at Timpanogos ward. About 50 children came to participate in the activities, many of them being children who attended regularly last year. Classes n dancing, story telling, and artscraft are being taught. who The Primary teachers helped with Monday's classes were Mrs. Aiken, Mrs. Rhea Adams, and MrST Maggie Coulson. These teachers with Mrs Nina Booth, director and dance teacher, Mrs Melba Pyne, pianist and music, and Mrs. Ruth Mecham, stories and artscraft, work together to make it an enjoyable and profitable afternoon for the children. This year special attention is being given to the boys who show keen interest In the building of airplanes and in doing woodwork and artscraft. The Work Schedule Follows: Timpanogos, Mondays, 2 to 4. Lake View, Tuesday, 2 to 4. Gr. View, Tuesday, 4:30 - 6:30 Vineyard, Wednesday. 2 to 4. Sharon. Wednesday 4:30 - 6:30 Pi. View. Friday, 2'00 to 4 00 Edgemont. Friday. 4:30 to 6:30 THURSDAYS are Childrens Days at Rosa-law- n. This is the day when the children of the whole stake gather to take advantage of swimming lessons given at the pool and to participate in the softball tourna- is my duty to obey my countrys laws. is my duty to vote, so my government may truly represent the will of the people. It is my duty to keep informed as to the honesty and ment. ability of candidates for public office. It is my duty, by my vote and my influence, to correct injustice. It is my duty to pay such taxes as have been devised by representatives elected by me, to defray the cost of government. It is my duty to serve on juries when called on. It may sometimes become my duty to hold a public office for which I am suited, so my government may function efficiently. It is my duty to defend my country, if need should arise. It is my duty to abide by the will of the majority, to stand behind my government, so my nation may be unified in time of crisis. children between aces 4 to 12. are invited to attend their various wards and to join with the Primary on Flav day. All OSCAR A. SPEAR. president and manager of the Spear Lumber company Is in Denver this week end attending the International Rotary convention there which begins June 15 and continues until June 29. Mr pear has been named bv Rotarv's head offi' e to the cha.r of the Wood Industrv Craft Assembly at the Convention. It Is expected that some 10.090 rotarians will attend during the convention OREM LIBRARY INCREASES BOOKS WEDDINGS Wedding receptions marked the past week at two homes in Sharon district, when the home of Mr. and Mrs. V. Emil Hansen was the scene of festivities at a reception Ruth,' given for their daughter, and Arthur R. Watkins, married Friday in the Salt Lake Temple; and the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Wiscombe was gay with friends, and relatives at a reception for their daughter, Wilma, and J. Robert Gillespie of Edgemont, who were married Thursday. More than 200 guests assembled at each home, to extend their best wishes for happiness to the newly married couples. The bridegrooms are respectively the sons of President and Mrs. A. V. Watkins of Sharon stake, and of Bishop and Mrs. Sharp C. Gillespie of Edge- mont ward. Baskets and vases of peonies, roses and orange blossoms and others flowers of the season completed the decorations at the Hansen home which were in a pink and white color scheme. At the Wiscombe home exterior decorations and colored lighting marked the lawns in front of the house where refreshments were served from the dining room. aviatIonTchool OPENS DOORS TO 20 MORE PILOTS Twenty additional pilots are now being accepted at the Aviation school at the Provo airport, announces Merrill Christopherson, manager, the last crew of 20 students being now eligible for their wings following examinations this week. Applicants for the next series of instructions being given at the airport school must be between 19 and 26 years of must age, have at leat one year of college, must pass a physical examination, and must be a citizen of United, States, according to Mr, Christopherson. Applications may be made at the airport or at the physics department at Brigham 'Young university where Dr. Milton Marshall will Interview applican's Any person in Utah county wh' meets the requirements noted above is eligible to make application, he adds. The number of books in the Orem Library is steadily increasing. During the last month over 200 books have been donated. These Include another contribution of some 40 books from P. W. Merrill for the Russel Homer Memorial section which will bring the total of that particular portion up to over 150 volumes. Other contributors during May were Sam Kitchen, V. E. Hansen. Clarence Carter, A. V. Watkins, (with over 50 volumes), Sharon school, and Sharon ward relief The latter collection insociety. cludes such books as the life of Julia Ward Howe, Alice Freeman Palmer; popular plays, The Dolls House by Isben, The Hour Glass by Yeats, Nowadays by Middleton; new fiction; The Harbor by Ernest Poole, The Talleyrand Maxim by Fletcher, Mr. Britiing Sees it Through by II. G. Wells. The accession record shows the library as having over 1650 volumes to its credit. A year ago Ward members of Edgemont there were about 900 volumes in will honor their retiring bishopric the library which shows an in- Tuesday, June 17 at a ward party crease of 750 books during the being held in the Amusement hail. past year. All are invited to attend and pay The books have ail been classi- their respects to these honored fied and numbered according to officers. the Dewev Decimal System, announces Mrs. Ruth Mecham, liFREE BAIT brarian; and plans for cataloguing the books in the near future are now under way. Rpmember that donations of Commencing Jane 12, and until anv type of books are gladly re- further notice, grasshopper bait ceived at the library, and it is will be available at the Utah hoped that many more of the County Fair Grounds Thursday people of Orem will bring any and Friday of each week from 0 books they can spare to the lib- o'clok A. M. until 4 o'clock P. M. Bait will bo free but rary must furnish their own sacks or containers and come prepared SHOWER to mix their bait. Mixing will he done under the supervision of a A shower for Mias Fern Kitchen who is leaving soon for the mis- County man. sion field is being given today. (Thurlavl at 7:30 p. m. at the The total capacity of storage home of Mr. Maude Park All intended for grain in Utah was Gleaner grlls and Y. W. M I. A. equivalent on March 1, 1941 to officers are invited space for 10,255,566 bushels. Edgemont Will Honor Outgoing Bishopric The new Scera theater nearing completion attracted these workers most, Mr. Thorpe declaring that here is evidence of an outstanding cooperative effort which combines unified financing and organization to its problems resulting in a magnificent example of community efforts devoted to community betterment. Dr. J. C. of the Moffitt, superintendent Provo city schools, and Gunda nderson, state supervisor of dancing under WPA sponsorship, both praised the Scera Tributes paid by Mr. Thorpe in his address on "Community Organization" sounded the high note of the week in emulation of Scera, for he saw in the Sharon Cooperative Educational Recreational Association the highest development of community resources toward the objective of recreation for everyone at a cost which is but a fraction of the cost involved in any other form of organized recreation. 8 era is organized under the it Utah state laws as a organization, and all participants in the program become member of this asset lation, and are entitled to its benefits at cost. Whatever profit accrues from the operations of the theater, the swimming pool, the dancing pavilion, or from any other activity sponsored bv the Association comes back directly to the membership as a whole No person connected with the organization gets a private profit out of the activities of Scera. It was a week of enthusiasm, derlares A. P. Warnick, chairman of Scera Summer Recreation programs and nowhere else in the state could snoh a gathering of recreation leaders have been held with such an outstanding example of cooperative recreation being Parlell constantly before them. Peterson, W. Kirby Alien, Ruth Mecham, and Ersel Cook, and other local workers devoted the week to the training thus offered. non-prof- non-prof- it EMERGENCY EXISTS Says Dyches Ftah'g strawberry crop is NOT spoiled, the berries are finw qualdeity and mostly undamaged, spite the recent rains, but they must be gathered immediately, and the growers need pickers todeclares T. W. Dyches of day, the Unemployment bureau here who has charge of finding workers for agriculturists Mr. Dyches urges that pickers enlist today whether they nped the work or not, as it is a fine piece of Americanism to see that no waste occurs in this fertile valley, for unless pickers get into the fields immediately many of them will be a great loss to the growers. A bus leaves every morning at 6 a. m. from the Farmers and Merchants bank comer taking pickers out to the fields All you need to do to get work is be there, says Dr. Dyches. Babys Clothing Display Friday On Friday, June 13, at 2 p. m , the class on "Baby'B Clothin " will be given at the Utah Valley Hospital Outpatient department. An interesting display of Baby's Clothing is planned ' All expectant mothers are Invited to attend. An expectant mothers' class was held last Friday. Demonstration of The Baby'B Bath" was given, and the film Judy's Diary" was ehown. Carol B Ralle, R. N. Mildred Allred, R. N Public Health Nurses |