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Show FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1922 Piano Recital Select Pictures to Be At College Hall i Shown at Strand I CHURCH ACTIVITIES SAINTS CHURCHES. PROVO FIRST WARD The Beehive girls, under the direction of Professor Elmers E. Nelson of (he The Womens Municipal Council of Mrs. Amanda Johnston and Miss Al- - B. will preseht some of his I. city has been working forsome lie Jones, will give the program in vanred piano stufl-ntin a free re- - time on a plan to show properly the First ward meeting house Sun- - cital Wednesday veiling, March censored pictures to the children of day evening, at 7 at College hall. ,The following Provo. comlmeneing Last night a meeting was In addition to the splendid ' teresting program,has been called by, Professor F. S. Williams, A j arranged by the Beehive nounced: president 'of the City Home and Peer Gynt Suit arrangement or School association, of the officers of girls and the beekeepers, the girls will be awarded the emblems and tw pianos, eight hands. the different districts of Provo, to .seals. (at Morning. with the ivu ' committee of the iqeet PROVO SECOND WARD Isaac ( b In the Hallo of the Mounts council comprised of .Afrs. W. T. Hau? Broekbank will be the principal King. ler. Mrs.' Jacob Coleman and Mrs. L. at the O. Potter. Mutual First speaker This meeting was 'called conjoint meetpiany, one Huisn and Maud Dixon second piano. ing Sunday evening in the Second to hear the proposition made by ward meeting house. The following Melba Clark md Myrtie Jen Sutton of the Strand theater. Ray The sen. Home and School association joined splendid musical program will also be given: Piano solo, Edgar John Valse.in A Flat'?. with the .cotin oil in the furtherance Chop son; vocal solo, Mrs. Marie H. Hoof the movement. 'The chairman of Myrtie Jensen Valse Caprice mer; piano solo, Lloyd Williams. Hoffm the parent-teacher- s association in PROVO THIRD WARD At the LesteptAllen each district was appo interlay the Strau Sunday evening meeting of 'the Provo (a) Dreaming president to act as a central commitThird ward. Professor H. R. Mer-- ! (b) Reverie tee. This committee is comprised of rill will be the speaker. The prelimiLillie D. &eeham Mrs. Ralph Pouiton of the Franklin Frirhl district, chairman; Mrs. Edna nary program will be furnished by Etude in G.. Jenthe Provo high school, under the diMelba L'lark kins of the Maeser district, Mrs. rection of Miss Elsie Hollermann. Friml Sarah Harmon of the Parker, Mrs. Egyptian Dance p PROVO FOURTH WARD The Frank Wanless Arthur Salt of the Timpanogos and Mrs. F. G. Warnick of the B. Y. V. junior and senior Beehive girls of Concerto in G Minr (first movethe Fourth ward M I. A. will give Mendelssohn The first performance will be Satur-- 1 ment) the Sunday evening program in the Maud Dixon day, March 11, Rebekah of Sunny-broo- k wTard meeting house, commencing at Vocal ( selected ) ... .William Knudsen Farm, was chosen for the 7 oclock. Mrs. Anha Rasband will Russian Dance . X... j Friml first selection. talk on Beehive Work, after which Helene Clark. the senior girls will demonstrate the Spinning Song ffconi The Fly... ..Wagner-Lisz- t various fields of beehive work by ing Dutchman ' lone ifuish filling cells. The junior girls will Scherzo B Flat iVfinor illustrate the Spirit of the Hive, Chopin after which a member of the stake Ether J'gnsen t? board wil award the emblems and March Hongroiset, (two pianos) A stage full of royal splendor, seals. The musical numbers will Howalski simulating 4he gorgeous- beauty of also be given by the Beehive girls. Frank Wanless and Ether Jensen the courts of the orient about 850 PROVO FIFTH WARD B. C. will greet the eyes of those Sunday NEVER AGAIN who witness the production of the evening services will be held in the Fifth ward meeting house at 7 Brigham Young University faculty d Manager-DiThe House of Rimmon, on oclock, when .Professor E. H. East-mon- d yOu , see that boy play, will give an illustrated lecture. just now, who ha been here so Monday, and Tuesday, March 6 and A vocal duet will be rendered by the many times? , 7, in College Hall. Misses Elaine and Virginia ChristenOffice Boy Yes, sir. Amid the scented atmosphere of sen, and a splendid reading given by Manager Do yoqI know what he dusky idol worshippers of this anMiss Wanda Boyack. wants? tique period, made real by the presPROVO SIXTH WARD ProfesOffice Boy No, jjsir. ence of colorfully dressed soldiers, sor T. L. Martin of the B. Y. U. will Manager Well, he wants your courtiers, and slave dancers, be the speaker at the evening sacramen- job and if he gets? in here to me priests, the author. Dr. Henry VanDyke, has t-meeting at the Sixth wrnrd again hes going tofget it! woven a plot that reveals the chimeeting house Sunday evening at 7 and falseness of men and canery oclock. A pleasing vocal duet will First North and F$rst East. Mass women of that day who stood in high be rendered by Mr. and Mrs. F. L. every Sunday morning at 10:30. places; and the love of country Hickman, a reading by Mrs. George Catechism class, Saturday at 10:30 Slid the devption to liberty that pro. Meyers, and a violin .solo bv Charles and Sunday at 9c 30 oclock. Rev, vailed amongst the common poop1. LATTER-DA- Y kd-.th- is s - m - j j j ZZJ U j , To Our Friends and the General Public We Desire to Announce That We Have Taken Over the Sale and Distribution of the j f Li .1.-:..- .. j Faculty Players Ready for Stage - Chevrolet Motor Car -- For Utah, Juab and Wasatch Counties In Entering the Automobile Business 10 Years Ago We Pioneered the Light Car Business South of Salt Lake City, and we Have Ever Since Kept Our Eyes on the Development of Light Cars. This Attention has led Us to the Conviction That the Above Move was an Absolute Necessity To Our Patrons We Desire to Say We have Endeavored to Serve You. We Desire Your Continued Pat- Wilde. Fast meeting will be held in the various L. D. S. wards Sunday afternoon at 1 oclock. SEVENTYS QOURUM MEETING All members of the 174th quorum of Seventy are requested to be present at the regular quorum meeting to be held at the Provo Fourth ward meeting house Sunday morning. Mar. 5, at S:45. Dr. George E. Sandgreq, , Senior President. G, Delaire, pastqk REORGANIZED CHURCH West Fourth South? street. school at 10:30. Sunday S p. m. S. S. Holm, i der. - at J aSiMY, SALVATION First West . Sunda"srvices: Una1!' bo but tough the faiHuui love and no of the rilave man! .if ro-.- Open v : .iVt-- o h air. 10:30 a. m Sunday school, 2 Jfi is m.; open air,' 7?: 3 0 p. m Salyd- t ot Mirpa-sin- g in id lanpmagi FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, tion meeting, 8 f. m. Tuesday SCIENTIST SO North University open air meeting, J:30 p. m.t inside ea ut and is fraught avenue. Sunday school at 9:45; meeting, 8:30 p. n. Thursday Open of thtJii 7:311 p. m.; inside meet- Sunday morning services at 11 air meeting, S m. No man eyer bought a Suit that , oclock. Subject, Man. p. ing, Saturday Open ajtr 7:30 p. n.; inside meeting, I fit him as well as some other suit meeting, CATHOLIC CHURCH he has had which cost im a lot less. Corner 8 p. m. All are Welcome. t : ; : - ' ; - I Things You Will jFind On Display at Our Store Are New Spring Merchandise Bought at the New Low Spring Prices and Not for Special Sales. ronage. We Will Continue to Service the Cars we Haveff Sold, the Same as Though no Change had Been Made. Chevrolet Owners we bid you Welcome J. f QUALITY IS RIGHT u PRICES ARE RIGHT Let Us Show You Coats from . Suits from . . . . . $12.50 to $40.00 $19.50 to $60.00 . Man Killed by Aged ' Passenger Train ' Davis, a transient about 70 f age, was instantly killed 8:30 o clock iy morning at Was struck by the westbound G. passenger train No. 1, a es east of Colton. The body iught to the Berg Mortuary held city, where It is being the word from, relatives in, to Conductor Alfred wording dead when picked was Davis two cuts in the received had . the head, and a compound' of the right leg. found in h ding to letters Tues written which he had his on way was he le at Price,, writ-hi- s were letters The ornia. Davis of brothers, V.W.S. H.Davis. 3 Mich., and street, Niles, Ohio. Davis said: ,e of the letters west sunny the n my way to east the to back :0 come . MORE TRUTH THAN POETRY Hordes of autos now remind us We should build our roads! to stay And, departing, leave behind us. Kind that rains wont wrash away. When our children pay the mortgage Fathers madetg haul their loacs, Theyll not have to ask the question, Heres the bonds, but wheres the Exchange. roads? f Mrs. H. R. Atkins was hostess to the members of the Ladies Literary club at her home Thursday afternoon when a splendid book review .was ExMrs. Heber Rupper. given bymusical d were numbers cellent refreshments after which light were served to the following club Mrs. Dwight Packard, members: TayMrs Herald Clark, .Mrs. Heber Grant .Mrs. Dunn, Harold Mrs. lor P. L. Larsen, Mrs. Eggertsen, Mrs. Walter Needham, Mrs. Hugo Price, Mrs. Peter JenTaylor. Mrs. Sterling A. Bullock,. Jr., Mrs. sen Mrs. James Dean, William Mrs. Heber Rupper, H. R. Mrs. and Paxman Mrs. Alma Atkins, hostess. ! ren-dre- ! Orem Store Robbed, Burglars at Large Thieves entered the Lincoln grocery store, located on the state highway about three miles north of thisa city, last night and carried away large supply of provisions. They gained entrance through a broken front window which the proprietor of the store had failed to have repaired. According to Deputy Sheriff Karl Boshard, who investigated the case, the burglars at first had tried to pry open a back door, but failing in this had gone through the front window. Among the supplies taken away were three sacks of flour, twenty pounds of coffee, ten packages tea, and a large amount oL candy, gum, tobacco, chocolate, soda crackers and laundry soap. COLEMAN CONTRIBUTES BOOKS The Brigham Young University has received a valuable acquisition to its library in a set of Moores Dieight gest of International Law volumes, the munificent gift of City Attorney Jacob Coleman. V Dresses from. $10.50 to $50.00 A Remedy for Flu Comes From Paris As if in mockery of us, the follow ing remedy for influenza is printed in a Paris paper: Take a litre of good old rum, add to it a few grammes of sugar, a few cloves and a dash of lemon and heat it. When it gets boiling hot, go to bed, aftei carefully placing a hat upon the footboard of the bedstead. (Any old hat will do; it need not be the latest fashion.) Then every five minutes drink a glass of the remedy, keeping your eyes carefully fixed upon the hat. In about a quarter of an hour you will see two hats where only one was seen before. That will be an encouraging symptom that the remedy is operating. Continue taking it methodically and presently a third hat will be distinctly visible. Go on drinking, but when the fourth hat appears, as it surely will, stop without fail. The cure will then be complete. Proba-tu- m est. N. Y. Gobe. v) Here you will find an answer to your Springtime wants. I new Silks and Cottons for vour Easter frocks, has brought that is charming may be seen. Gorgeous Whatever the season - j 1v- -' NEW SPRING MERCHANDISE ARRIVING DAILY SERVICE STYLE QUALITY FARMER BROS. CO |