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Show r (ZDMDOQ, .E Orchard Hills of Utah 1970 Thursday, May 14, 35 Watt Utah Avenue, Payton, Utah 84451 BOfflMipER SI Association.- - Founded 1685 A weekly newspaper established in 1888, published every Thursday and entered as Second Class matter at the Post Office in Pay son, Utah 84651, under the act of Congress March 3, 1879. J. C. HENDERSON, Editor and Publisher SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Outside Payson and Vicinity, 5.00 year, 2 years $9.50. All subscriptions are payable in advance. Payson area: $6.00 per year. DEADLINES: Advertising, Monday, 5:00 p.m.; School News, Friday, 5:00 p.m.; Social News, Monday, 9:00 a.m. All other news & classified ads, Monday, 5:00 p.m. Pictures, Monday, 5:00 p.m.; All deadlines advanced one day when a holiday falls during the week. PLEASE BE ON TIME1 EDITORIALS Money saved by advertised specials A full 24 per cent on meat costs can be saved by buying advertised specials at supermarkets according to distinguish- ed economist-writ- Sylvia er Porter. Some examples of advertised prices as compared to the national average by Miss Porter include: Advertised chicken, 29 cents; national average, 41 cents. Advertised bacon, 69 cents; national average 41 cents. Advertised chuck roast, 55 cents; national average, 70 cents. Miss Porters advertised prices were obtained from Washington newspapers early this spring. This column made a similar check within several small cities, comparing advertised prices to prices within the same city. The results were roughly the same as reported by Miss Porter; however, the disparity on some items ran to more than 50 per cent. The large advertisers are not engaged in charity. Their low prices may be attributed to several factors. The anticipated large volume of sales reduce the required margin of profit. The costs of storage, spoilage, and distribution are reduced because of advertising. Also, advertising is really the latest news about market conditions. When turkey or chicken is selling for 20 cents a pound the advertising is reporting that the national or international market for such at that time. produce is As Miss Porter points out, there is no new rule for cutting food prices, but the best old rule" is to shop for advertised specials. Winning the first place trophy for its firebuilding exhibit for Scout troop coma held at BYU's Fieldhouse last Saturday petition in the 12th annual them, it, too, must change. Your hospitals administrative team, and people like them all over the country, are working to meet the challenges of the Your hospital is becoming a community health center, a shopping center for all your personal health needs. Such concentration of health services will eliminate duplication. This is one way hospitals plan to meet their challenges. There are other over-suppli- ed ways too. When you check into your hospital in the future, your stay may be brief. 10-1- 7) or visitor. up the physicians and nurses is a small army of people ready to care for you. There are over 200 different job classifications on hospitaL. staffs. . Backing fact, it takiajv.er'-276..rhospitj- A 'to care Jn, workers patients. The national hospital payroll is over 9 billion dollars a year! In reality the hospitals' shopping list The wide-awak- of materials is probably the largest the world. It has a total of more than ten thousand items on it. Most of them you never see until you need them - then they are ready for you. We used to think a hospital was simply to care for the sick or a place injured. Today a hospital is much more than that. Now the emphasis is on cure with hospitals also deeply involved in preventive medicine and in coordinating the total health needs of the community. Hospitals will follow this trend more and more in the future as they strive to meet increasing demands for care and for offering more other changin':; The future will medical technology and in hospital care. These changes are challenges that must be met by your hospital; and to meet v m complete-ferv4ceS.'"- Depending on your illness, you may stay for only a few hours. New medical advances make this possible. More levels of care geared to the intensity of illness will fit the treatment to the need of each patient with greater efficiency and economy the result. Many of us think of a hospital in personal terms. We think of it in terms of family, friends and acquaintances. Try to think of it in terms of the total community - the way your hospital is beginning to see itself. The next time you visit a hospitaror drive past one, stop for a moment and in terms of lhinkaQL..wkat goes qa inside . money. Think of manpower,: material the many waysyour hospital is striving to meet its health and financial obligations and remember, your hospital cares! :round the a The View From Here ' health requirements of the 1970s. Hospital week - Your Hospital Cares Your hospital cares long before you need it. Right this minute when needing hospital care is furthest from your mind, your hospital is ready to care for you. As a reminder in appreciation for our hospital featNational Hospital W'eek (May ure-. the theme Your Hospital Cares. This takes quite a bit of doing. It takes manpower, material and money, much of it you never see as a patient night was Troop 93 of the Payson Third Ward, Congratulations boys on a job well done. Scout-O-Ram- febTOWNoO By Ruth Roth by Once again DAYLIGHT SAVINGS TIME is upon us and so far all I have heard about are complaints. The young mothers say that they are having more of a struggle than ever to get their small children to go to bed at the time they should. One such mother says that when she remembers the summers in the past she wonders how they will get through another. She says that the children do stay up later than they otherwise would and her husband works later than usual in the yard after work. She either works out with him or does some extra jobs indoors. As a result they eat later too and that makes her work of cleaning up and doing dishes dragging on. She says that she noticed last year especially that they had more family spats and she thinks that it was simply because all of them were too tired. Farmers wives say that the same thing holds true for them and some of them noticed that they were going around all summer feeling just plain washed out. A few of them found that they had to take a little nap in the middle of the day to help get them through the day. Some folks decided last year that they "were sick of. having other people decide what they could or couldnt do. They made Davis Evans Dear Reader: Its not been so many moons ago that was having my car serviced at a main street service station. As I waited, I noticed a car go by with a cargo of teenagers. It flipped a Uee at eighth north and proceeded south; a few minutes later the same car returned and made the Uee and went south. Having nothing better to do I decided to count the trips those kids were about to make. You know that car made that turn eleven times in the next hour. I know not how many times they made that main street run before the day was over, but I'm sure they came again a few more times because the day was young, my car was serviced and I had other things to do. Now this little experience could introNeedduce many subjects: Time Waste, less Car Wear and Tear, Youth Jobs, etc, etc., but what it meant to me was: I minds that they just wouldnt clocks ahead and be independent about the whole thing. They were too for a while, but by the time they had been late to a few meetings and appointments they decided that they had no choice but to conform. They feel that the only ones who can probably get away with leaving the clocks alone are those living on isolated ranches or herding sheep in the ranges or someone who lives by themselves in some mountain retreats or something like that. I heard many people ask, Who, if anybody, really benefits from the practice I myself would like to know too. anyway? I feel that if ANYBODY does they haven't let many others know about it because I have yet to hear anybody praise it; If, like I suspect, no one really wants it why doesnt someone do something about it and abolish it in our area? I don't recall that it has ever been on the ballot of anything, but I do think that the majority should rule in the matter, and I hope that before next year it can be changed. Do any of you agree with me. Let me know. And if you know what has to be done let the rest of us know and lets get busy. If it lias any benefits let me know them too. up put . bank makes itallso easy. e B their their Here is but one example of how millions across this broad land of ours are killing time because they havent been given responsibility through the joy of work nor have they been taught the value of time. Its no wonder we have college walkouts and college destruction. Too many dont realize that when they pelt a rock through a $200 window its just as bad as robbing $200 from the trousers of a sleeping taxpayer. Or when they stir up enough confusion and a college must close its doors, some good kids are being denied learning experiences they so desire. Now this brings me back home again: of kids A couple of weeks ago we saw the youth of our area exhibit about 500 animals at our annual stock show. For 46 years this show has taken place and thousands of boys and girls have been given valuable training in responsibility prior to their venturing forth to conquer in this big beautiful land of ours. In talking to an agriculture instructor, he informed me that a boy or girl must spend at least one hour per day in the caring for one beef in its preparation for exhibition. One hour per day for one year adds up to 365 hours and some of these kids exhibit for five or six years. I have no way of knowing but Ill bet theres dern few of these kids engaged in rioting in their respective schools wherever they may be. Now I've come to another part of the forest: Who knows how hard these kids work in their desire to achieve? They, their parents, a few friends and some stork show officials are about all, yet when one endeavors to get a write-u- p in a state paper, one isnt ever sure theyll print such a undramatic event and even if they do, almost impossible to find and when it is found, it's located back of the obituaries, sandwiched between a shoe advertisement and a classified ad, but have a teenager steal a car, go on a pot party, slug a teacher, etc. and it gets written up in a spot for all the world to see at one glance. I believe it's time we started recognizing our youth for their achievements whether it be in the feeding of a critter excelling in the arts, going to church, getting good grades in school etc. etc. Well cheerio? I think I'll drive down town and watch the teens rod Main Street and Ill bet a buck I dont see a critter feeder among them. its CONCERNED ABOUT YOUR FUTURE?. s?)x Hair Styling is Your future 3. START O TODAY HONOrI AWARD rsCHOOr?' 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