March Spotlight




My name is Lillie Schramm Francom
I was born in a little two room adobe house on 3rd South and 6th East in Payson, UT where I grew up and went to school. With the exception of about 3 years when my family lived in Pioche, NV. I spent my youth in Payson. I went to Peteetneet grade school, Payson Junior High School and graduated from Payson High School in 1945.
I met my Husband Arthur L. Francom at my brother’s Missionary Farewell Dance in January of 1946 and we were married on July 5th 1946. We have four children they are Stewart, Ivy, Paula and Michele. We have 13 grandchildren, one granddaughter and 12 grandsons, and 11 great grandchildren five boys and six girls.
We were married for 60 years. My husband died just six weeks after our 60th wedding anniversary. We spent the first 25 years of our married life as farmers on our farm between Salem and Payson and he worked at Ironton and Geneva Steel form 1954 to 1986 running the farm on the side.
I went back to school at the age of 46 and got my LPN degree in nursing from Utah Technical College in Provo and worked at Payson Hospital until my retirement in 1991.
Both sides of my family have belonged to the church since its early beginnings and some helped build the Kirtland and Nauvoo temples and served in the Mormon battalion. My favorite scripture is the 23 Psalm.
I no longer do any work that I can get out of. My hobbies are spinning, knitting, sewing and whatever strikes my fancy. I have just finished compiling a book of family histories.
My husband and I did a little traveling before his health failed that included trips to Europe, Alaska, and Hawaii and trips to see our children that live in Kansas, Idaho and Iowa.
My greatest joys are family and friends and my greatest frustration is the computer.

Cooking Tips and Other tricks

Take your bananas apart when you get home from the store. If you leave them connected at the stem, they ripen faster.

Eggs: To really make scrambled eggs or omelets rich add a couple of spoonfuls of sour cream, cream cheese, or heavy cream in and then beat them up.

February Presidency Message

In Matthew 5:48, we are commanded to "Be ye therefore perfect." That is a scripture that can cause turmoil, when we think of all our weaknesses and faults. But when we read the last part of the verse "even as your Father which is in Heaven is perfect", it raises the question, "What is perfection in Heavenly Father's eyes?" Does it mean to have a perfectly decorated and clean house, with perfectly cooked food? Does it mean to have perfectly straight teeth in a perfectly trim and healthy body? Does it mean to have perfect kids?

That doesn't sound like perfection - it sounds like exhaustion!

In what ways does Heavenly Father want us to be perfect? Surely not worldly ways.

The vision of the tree of life may help us understand. In this vision, Lehi sees a tree with beautiful white fruit. He partakes of this fruit and finds it delicious. It also fills him with indescribable joy. It fills him with such joy that desires his family to partake, too. Some of them do, but some of them don't. Laman and Lemuel are drawn to a large and spacious building where crowds of people are looking at those who are eating the fruit and scoffing at them. As Lehi and his family eat of the fruit a dark mist overcomes the scene. Those who still desire to eat the fruit must walk on a straight and narrow path, holding on to a rod of iron in order to make it to the tree. Even once they reach it, they are not safe. Some who eat are ashamed due to the continued mocking of the crowd and fall away. But all who eat are filled with joy.

Lehi's son, Nephi, wanted to know what his father's vision meant. He prayed in faith and was able to see a vision of his own which answered many questions. Because of Nephi's inquiry we find out that the fruit of the tree of life represents God's love for us. We realize that feeling charity, the pure love of Christ, is the most desirable thing we can attain in this life.

Wouldn't this be one way of defining perfection? Being perfect in love towards our Heavenly Father, Christ, and our fellow beings? That sounds easier than having a perfectly clean house, doesn't it?

Or maybe not. Because according to the vision, we are surrounded on all sides by mists of darkness, or the temptations and pride of the world. Satan uses everything he has to keep us from that joy. It is not easy to stay on the path.

But there is a way. It is to keep hold of the iron rod. This, according to Nephi, represents the word of God.

Where do we find the word of God? We immediately think of the scriptures and the words of the prophets. But there is another source and that is our personal revelation. All of us have access to

the gift of the Holy Ghost, which we received at baptism. Pres. Lorenzo Snow said, "It is the grand privilege of every Latter-Day Saint...to have the manifestations of the spirit every day of our lives...[so] that we may know the light, and not be groveling continually in the dark."

We can access the Holy Ghost simply by asking, listening, and following its promptings. We do need to be worthy - the Spirit thrives in some environments and is stifled in others. But we don't need to be perfect. We just have to ask, listen and obey. When we feel promptings, we need to heed them, or that gift leaves us for a while until we are willing to obey.

Learning to speak the language of the Spirit takes spiritual labor. It is no different than learning another language. It takes time. It takes practice. But it is the most important work one can do on earth. For, step by step, through the Holy Ghost we can recieve promptings that will help us overcome weaknesses, strengthen our testimonies, and, most of all, be filled with the perfect, joyous love of God.

June Lesson Schedule

5th Chapter 46 & 47 Exaltation and judgment…Marilyn Crandall

12th Stake Conference

19th Chapter 32 Tithes and offerings…Nancy Frampton

26th…Teachings for our times…Joan Haderlie