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Show I! And The Free Hospitalization And Health Insurance Plan as Found in Alberta Explained by Visitor to B. Y. U. Vf . f t 4 Three Stakes Take Joint Action for Spray Lime-Sulph- Journar Service Rates Make Dollar Buy 41 Per Cent More Slew Garbage Disposal System Urged By City Engineer; Bulk Power Buying Cited ur Definite decision was made Tuesday at the Sharon stake seminary by the stake presiCompulsory Plan Would Make lrovo dencies of Sharon, Timpan-ogo- s, Free from Flies; Water Here Praised arid Utah stakes to take More than 500 operations, of which 263 were major joint action in the manufacur- nue of $47,352 waa collected from "Provo needa dormant gently than an nothing more operations, and not one death resulting during a 16 months ture of adequate garbage garbage rates. for needs the coming year's period, is the record of the Cardston, Alberta, Canada, hos- spray declared Elmer system disposal Many coast cities, reports Mr. pital under the famous "Medical Contract arrangements on Provo bench and adjacent ter- A. Jacobs Provo city engineer, thla there with the doctors of that community, according to a ritory, according to a report made week following his return from Jacob, are finding tbeir deep walla today by Adelbert Bigler, San Francisco and Palo Alto and with a saline taste In them, and report made last week by John A. Johansen, of Cardston, to public of the Sharon stake sechairman era resorting to mountain water Tan-DDrVasco M. class at the B. Y. U. under other Pacific Coast a where ( How Doctors Keep People Well And Fees Are Paid by the Year Graphically Told to Provo Audience lime-sulpn- ur pre-medic- as s direction.! Mr. Johansen, a former student of the Y" more than 40 years ago, returning here for Leadership Week was the guest speaker at Dr. Tanner's class, his theme 4 being hospitalisation and "Health Insurance. Throughout Alberta there are districts, where rural as well as urban residents are entitled to hospltallx niton for 61.00 a day, merely enough to cover coots of food supplied, wlh all drugs, dressings and use of operating room, and other facilities being supplied free of charge to taxpayers. If a patient is not a taxpayer, or does not belong to the family of a taxpayer, he or she may yet obtain the 1 a day rata by paying $6 a year In advance of March 1 each year to the hospital district and thus becoming a hospital "supporter and so entitled to the same consideration as a "rata payer who owns lands and pays taxes, reported Mr. Johansen. During his address, Mr. Johansen sketched the history of the hospitalisation movement which swept Alberta a number of years ago, arising from the needs of the people in a vast prairie country, and resulting in a provincial act being passed creating these hospital districts, and guaranteeing to all citizens the protection of free hospitalization regardless of where they may live in city or country. But hospital bills are one thing and doctor bills are another. Medical fees, though modest, are often impossible for hundrdes of 12 municipal hospital 5 . I i M 1 1 ! (Conttnnad oa Fas Ttaaa) Our Advertisers ADVERTISER SAID: advertising in your paper is more good will advertising than anything else". There was no argument following, for all advertising Is "good will advertising. Try any other kind once, and sfe what happens. Borne merchants play np prices, others quality, but they always want good wUl. That is the basis of ail modern business, for who trades anywhere unless he is Invited to trade there? The following merchants are paying for space in this paper for the purpose of letting you, as a reader of this paper, know that they want you to come to their steeps and trade with them. They offer services lndlspenslble to oar modern life. And it helps a lot if yon tell the merchant that you appreciate the "good will they show toward your buslngaa by advertising In "your paper": Banker Farm Feeds Drage'a Market ONE My i Dixon Beal Estate Fletcher'e Furniture Exchange C. V. Hansen Hill Brothers Dr. J. E. Harrison Hayward's Market Hanson's Food Market Imperial Cleaners sad Dyers I- - St H. Tire Co. Lewie Barber Shop Madsen Closiyrs Mutual Coal and Lumber Nlnier and Claysoa Overman Mattress ws Riverside Service V. Ia Howards, 8 pear Lumber Co. Shell Oil Co. Taylor Brot here Trl --State Lumber Co. Utah Timber and Coal Utah Power and Light Valley Floor and Fred t Cluff By Re-Elect- ed Farm Loan Body Sidney H. Cluff was president of the Farm Loan association Tuesday afternoon during the annual meeting of the directors. Qeorge Oroneman became the vice president; E. H. Calder, J. J. Burr, and S. H. Blake directors. Ernest M. Madsen was named secretary treasurer again, and George W. Brown, acting secreos tary treasurer. President Cluff presented his annual report at the opening of the meeting, and Mr. Madsen, the financial report, both of which were accepted by the meeting. Harry W. Carlson, chief of the Utah Loan division, during a brief address, explained the 1127 Farm Loan act, and a number of questions were asked regarding the matter which he answered readily. Stanley Sorensen, aetlng as stenographer for the meeting, re--, ported the business of the meeting to the "Utah Valley News." A. Ray Elans Gets Appointment Congratulations are extended A. Ray Ekins of Pleasant View this week In his appointment by Governor Henry H. Blood to the state board of agriculture, being placed In charge of horticulture. The letter of appointment, to curity committee. The spray will be manufacture ed at the Sharon stake cannery under the direct supervision of Charles H. Poulsen, foreman, who declares it will be equal In all respects to the excellent spray made at this same plant last year. Mr. Bigler also announces that a large metal or concrete tank of five to six thousand gallons capacity will be added to the plant, and hydrometer and laboratory tests will be made of eaeh run to insure proper strength and mixture. Baals On Plana for sales and distribution it basis states will bo on a Mr. Bigler, and sulphur will be purchased by the carload, and lime also at quantity prices, with the possibility being dlaeuaaed of establishing a lime kiln for the production of high calcium hydrated lime. Mr. Bigler remarks that stone lime of good quality is already being burned near Provo, and the manufacture of phosphate fertile ser is being considered. Leading fruit growers of bench, 8panish Fork and Payson are already showing in terest In the plant activities at the 8haron stake cannery, states Mr. Bigler. Non-Pro- fit non-prof- Ma-plet- on dated Jan. 8 waa received Monday, and congratulations have been flowing In from hia many friends.' The position which Mr. Ekins now fills was vacated by the death of Henry Erlander rycen-tl- y. Every Utah residential and farm customer of Utah Power A. V. Wat kina To Discuss Health and Light company will be able Cooperatives; Other Noted Speakers to punrhaae 41 per cent morn service In tbo Spring of 1138, Frovo has been selected for the first cooperative eduthan in 1924, due to the new electric service rates soon to become cation conference in a series of such conferences planned effective, according to R. H. Ash- by state and national authorities to educate the workers in worth, assistant to tha matters of consumer and housing cooperation. commercial manager of Five stats and national leaders. cities, biggest of which la the company, in a statement made Including J. R. Beua, manager of he went quite extensively Into projects, the y the project, coating in Provo this week. the Weber Central Dairy, Jndgo municipal garbage dlapoaal sysSunday and bringing $100,000,000 nearly Mr. Aehworth haa been tem. operated on a minimum coat hero Arthur V. Watkins, Mayor Mark water from the Yosemlte head of IS centi to each householder Funeral services for pity Judga Andaraon, Oliver A. Paterson, ot waters. In favor- attending a meeting of tha U, P. Provo stands each month, this service charge able position as to water supply. A L. company employes at which Don R. Ellertson, 43, who died Washington, D. C., R. K. Nelson, being levied againet all houaea In Tuesday after a month's Illness The power question waa not so ha explained the new rata sche- from blood Infection, will ha held acting manager of the Utah Cothe city, and rated according to a fixed echedule under tha control favorable, commented Mr. Jacob. dules ordered recently by tbe In the Provo Bocond ward chapel operative Association, and Mrs. and Inspection of tha city en- Palo Alto buys Ita electric power state public eervica commission. 8unday at 1.30 p. m., with Bishop Mary K. Mowar, head of the woIn bulk from the privately owned gineer. Baaed upon the pew residential B. H. Knudaon eondfcftlng tha men's division of tho Utah Fans company at eight milla per kilo- and farm rate Bureau, will speak at tha Cooper-ratlCompulsory Garbage Disposal effective April 1, services. Education Conference to ho Friends may call today and City trucks carry the garbage watt honr. At tha same time tha the average coet per kilowatt honr Saturday at tha Barg Mortuary held all day Satnrday, January II, from every city home and taka It city haa Ita own power plant delivered to all those consumers to the where tha body now lisa, and at la the Central 8ehool andltortum dump In the standing idle, for emergency pur- will bo 2.41 cento aa compand tha homa 256 South Sixth West In Provo, announces J ostia C. marsh lands along the coastline, poses, but the 2 mill rate la such with a national average whore a huge steam ahovel covers a good bargain that they cannot of 4.43 present street, prior to the services Sun- Stewart, chairman of tha confereenta kilowatt hour, per an It ence planning committee. for leas, although It completely every day. No file produce a difference of 21 per cent In day. Burial will taka placo In exist and no homas arc exempt actual production coot at the favor Provo city burial park. Pall ths of the Utah consumer, he bearers will bo from garbage dlapoaal. Tbo city switchboard la given of 4V& mills said. members of ths( Mhyor Mark Andaraon, who haa Colllna. at Fort oblibar association of Utah county. ordinance makes tha system an active part ia eneos ractaken Mr. Jacob came "Would yon favor buying Rural IUtae Same aa City gatory on all. Jndgo Ellertson waa bora Ang. ing a cooperative housing aasoda-tio- a back warmly In aympathy with Provos electric power In bulk Mr. Aawhorth explained that I, 1594 In Mona, a son at Mr. for Provo, will apeak to Ik omo such system being adopted from the Utah Power and Light under tha new domestic schedule d J10h U f1,lertOBL? on tha subjaet of Coopen- was aaked of Mr. approximately 10,009 UUh resi- received for Provo. company? tlvw Housing, , Jacob. dential and farm customers of public schools, graduating from Water and Power. Judga Artkar V. Watklas, pro. Mr. Jacob notes that all garbHe replied: The price woul the Company will bo billed on the tho Brigham Yonng university, aidant of tho Sharon stake, will t have to be low enough. It wool' same rate, irrespective of whether and later obtaining bla legal train- apaak oa Coopera tlvo Haaltk Asage dlapoaal work la done by and that tha city actually at least bo an Intonating thing t they roeldo In a large city or in ing from tha Hamilton Law school sociations. Ja'dgo Watklaa haa boon working for several yaan profits by tha operation, for a tha city if such an offer war rural territory and regardless of in Chicago. In 1919 Jndgo Ellertson mar- on a what use they make of eloctrle total of $25,214 waa tha lst made by tha Utah Power eompan plan far a cooperative mediservice. Heretofore, eity dwellers ried Lucile Vincent, and to Ik year's expenditures, while a "revi to the city commission." cal aasoctatfcnrwMck'wttl bo Mr received service at slightly lower have been born two sons and four to both tbs asadlcal cost, and consumer with range daughers: Keith, and Reed; Mary and to tha pablle. A CANADIAN FAMILY COMES TO Y and refrigerators wars billed on Gall, Patsy, Carol Sue and BarbMra. Mary K.- Mowar, different schedules than straight ara Dawn. In addition to hid known Utah Farm loader, win wife and aix children, his father, lighting customers bring to tha confaraaeo a report "The eubetantlal onto In com- four brothers and ona slater sur- of sections of tha National Farm vive. mercial lighting rate July 1 will Bureau Convention, which she reProminent In both Elka and make It poesible for merchants attended ip Chicago aa tha cently to add greatly to their store light- I. O. O. F. circles, Judge Ellert- Utah representative of tho Homo son also found politics and civic and Community. Department of ing sriithont additional monthly coet, he explained. This new affaire Interacting and practiced tha UUh Tana Bnraaa Fadara-tlo- a. commercial schedule reduces tha law In Provo and In Tooels counAn' outstanding speaker will ho top rate, after the 90 centa min- ty. imum charge, to 5 can tea per kiloJ. R. Bona, general manager of watt hour, whereas tha present tho Weber Central Dairy, who rata In Salt Lake, Ogden, and waa instrumental recently la helpProvo la ( centa and ontalde the ing Utah County farmers to orcities 7 centa per kilowatt hour. ganise a dairy cooperative association. Mr. Bo us will speak on tho to He cites other beneina the subject of marketing cooperaconsumer, including a 20 per cent llay V, Went ia tha new presi- tives. reduction for small power naera, an optional schedule required for dent of the Provo Bench Canal R. K. Nelson, aetlng manager the large power naera with the company, following tha meeting of tho Utah Cooperative Associathe of Board of directors demand charge baaed on a fifteen Tuesday tion will bo tha speaker on tha minute peak, and a reduction from recently elected. Mr. Went suc- subject of consumer cooperation. 10 to 5 per cent In the deferred ceeds W. J. Cordner. Tha conference plans call for an y payment charge added to delin- WL J, Hal is Bury waa meeting, with the morning of tho comp, session starting at 10:00 a. m. quent residential and commercial secretary-treasurany, but Leonard S. Walker war and lasting until noon. The afterbills. Mr and Mrs. John A. Johansen and Mr. Ashworth said tha draatlc named superintendent, sueceedlny noon session will stare at 2:00 Four Daughters from Cardston, Alberta reductlona will work hardships on Ray Loveless. A. O. Keetch war p. m. and last nntll 4:00 p. m. to Ilia following are members of the Company, whlcn can he over- also selected for Nella Anderson himself. succeed tha committee whleh planned tho come only through more extensive la Realizing a dream of more than 40 years ago, John A superintendent: conference: Mra. Mary K. Mower, Johansen of Cardston, Alberta Canada, is back at B. Y. I' nae of electric service as a result andthe aialatant Judga A. H. Christenson war Will Chadwick, Frank Shelley, of the reductions. attending Leadership week this month, and enjoying stud: named attorney for tbe company. Albert Hanson and Terry Draper groups and classes in the city and at the university, as of American Fork; H. E. Johnson, prior to 1897 when he left the Young university with hi 8. A. Kirk and Mr. Noavae (actteaching certificate and began teaching school at Monticell ing aa alternate for W. W. War-nicas a young man. His dreams however are more than ful of Pleasant Grove; Clark filled he has his wife with him, and four fine daughter? Allred, J. T. McCarthy and C. L. The George Albert Smith camp E. O. Larsen, chief of engineer, Sprague representing Orem and all four of which are students at B. Y. U. this winter. Verio, Anna, Mable, and Nellie are all girl to be proud of, lay of the Rone of UUh Pioneers re- of Salt Lake City, In preparation Llndon; William Cox, Stanley Mr. Johansen, but If yon ask them, they are prouder of "Dad tbar elected Walter C. Taylor aa presi- for the beginning of construction of Provo; of anything elae they know about, for Dad was not only a studen' dent, with the following other on Deer Creek. It is expected Cox, and Harry Butler Earl Diamond. J. Selvoy Boyer, in but an athlete, and fact has the distinction of being the captain officers at a meeting held Sunday: that this office will remain In of the only B. Y. U. football team which ever won a state champion T. M. Allman, first liotenant; J. Frovo during the four or more Vanr Waters and Wayne Beck of ship. Mr. Gideon Clark, second Rent.; J. yeara of Deer Creek eonetrnctlon. Springvllle; Jjease Barnes, Can you believe it. that here from Canada, romea a footbal' D. E. bringing with It some 20 em- Nichols and Mrs. Gray of Lehi; Billings, secretary; Phillip of Y" players to the University Houtx, captain who in 1895 took his treasurer; David Johnson, ploye. about half of whom are Mr. and Mra. John 8mith and Oro campus In Salt Lake City on Christmas Day and won the deriding A1 Madsen, assistant already employed at reclamation historian; over which state Y. U. B. the to the only game Crescents, gave H. Moore of Payson; and Mra. M. Rowe and J. M. headquarters in the Knight buildEd. historian: championship of its history to date? Mary Marcuson of Spanish Fork. R. ing. Johnny Johansen's plrture with his team mates hnng for years Jensen, publicity committee; In college hall, and Is yet found in many homes In the city, reminis- M. Boardman, chairman of amuae-meProfeasor Elmer Miller discus cent of the prowess of those early Cougars. committee, composed of S. Utah county had ita ahare of Bed "Todays Economic Problems Mr. Johansen, after a year at Montlcello. accepted a call to P. Eggertson, LeRay Decker, T. the mission field and spent 2$ months In the Eastern states for the Earl Pardoe, H. R. Merrill, and police activities according to a at Nephl Wednesday before the report Just filed by 8her!ff E. G. public forum at the high school L. D. S. church, returning afterward to teach at Woodslde In Emerv Ed, M. Rowe. Durnell. Trie report shows 425 there. county.' The fever to "Go North, Young Man" gripped him shortly 479 persons jailed, Investlgatlona, after hie marriage to Miss Nellie Nielson and they went to Canada, are Week plans Leadership 5 where he became a dynamic figure In the Ufa of his chosen com- being brought into filial comple- 84 Juveniles taken Into eonrt, to Lions 2 stolen property returned; munity. Secur24. "The with Jan. for tion In flnea collected; and $2,068 Politics, he believed. Is the bnelnesc of the people, and he was all of aa Zion" the of keynote Judge A. V. Watkins ada prime mover In a vast political movement In Alberta whirh placed ity In fees collected In tho civil diviMelvin Ballard J. Elder aesalona. tho Lions Clnb In 14 dressed In for saddle the the United Farraern of Alberta years, political sion. American Fork last night on and brought ahont many political reforma in the foothille province. of tbe Council of the Twelve will be tbe opening Lead by Attorney General Jotha subject of Deer Creek. Including the municipal hospitals act which gives to every resident Apostle of urban and rural Alberta hospitalisation at $1 n day cost to the speaker, and every church organ- seph Che and County Attorney The Judge Interpreted the ization i planning for program Arnold C. Roylance, city and patients. Deer Creek project In reReligious activitlea have also claimed hia time and boundless and aesalona presenting this town officials throughout Ttah to the industrial delation energy. Mr. Johansen bring at present a member of the Alberta theme. ara a drive county of Utah County, launching velopment Rtaka high council, after many yeara of service as ward bishop and s against slot machines, which la receiving a hearty response in other ward positions. The U. 's. Bureau of Reclama- the beginning of a state-wid- e from the members of the Financially he haa prospered equally well. For 24 years he haswill be moved Into Provo by movement against these Illegal club. tion and wind grassa hever had crop failure, despite drought, hall, frost, Feb. 1, according to a report by contraptions. (GtnSlaaad as ha IW) nt Ellertson Funeral Set For Hetch-Helch- vo city-own- f cow-trac- . - Wentz Heads Canal Board Personal Financial Independence Plan Outlined By Provo Banker How much you save, not how much you make is what decides how much you will be worth declared Victor J. Bird, of the Farmers and Merchants bank in an address recently before the members of a group of business and professional men in Provo. You don't have to be rich to be a capitalist. You become a capitalist whenever you put the money you have to work for you. The rich man' leconliarjr purpose of "savings' money works for him. The only but ths actual savings account difference is the amount of money Involved", he declared, as he introduced his subject, stating that the beginning of the year is a good time to start a consistent program for future financial Independence. A defnlte financial plan was then proposed by Mr. Bird., for every man to follow who is at all concerned with his own future financial welfare. This plan, suggested Mr. Bird, Is the same plan adopted, in the main, by every successful financier. The Utah Valley News here copies a summary of the plan proposed by Mr. Bird, who especially urged that It be adopted In the early years of mans life: 1. Open a savings account. All successful men have deposited in tbnt account regularly n certain percents re of their Incomes. They did not draw ont single penny unless It was absolutely necessary. As fast as the money was deposited it beran to earn more moner at eomponnd Interest. Over a period of years some of these sneeessfnl pennle have received thonsands of dollars In Interest alonp. 2. Take out life Insnrsnee. Premiums nre rharre aratnst vour In some, hnt life insnrsnee Is a safe and defnlte property. As increased, sneeessfnl earning men have increased both the ste of their denoslts and the amount of their Insurance. Life Insnrsnee. in addition to the primary object of it. serves the Cooperative Conference Convenes Here Saturday should come first 2 Build a home, or at least own a home. Thera are two main reason for this: First It la more economical to bny a home than to rent one all your life. Second, there is a certain satls-factlin owning yonr own home which cannot bo derived from any other source. Home ownership lends stability to a mana thoughts and actions. It makes for and both of which are so necessary to effinent work and making the moat of one's talents and opportunities. In other words there la a good chance, says Mr. Bird, that the man who liven in his own home will be more successful than If h were living in a rented honae an apartment 4. The last step in this personal finance program which haa met is investing and with success on INVESTING REALLY BELONGS LAST. Not until a man ia maintaining a savings account of at leaat $1000 and not until bo is adequately insured, and not nntll he haa settled the question of home ownership to his satisfaction, has he any business Investing. Mr. And by investing, Bird means, either Investing in bonds, or buying preferred or common stocks. Any short ent to success which neglecta these rnlea is a moat unwise and unsound policy, concluded Mr. Bird. all-da- er nt d Events In the Valley k) nt $4,-74- $1,-12- . Talks . |