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Show -- Published by The Harald Company, Proro, UUh. EVERT .MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. B. C. Rodgera, Editor and Publisher, J. A. Owena, Adrertlslng Manager, Harry Butler, Circulation Manager. tntormountaln AdrertUlng Representative, Leo L. Lerln, Nesa Bldg., Salt Lake Entered at second class mall matter June rroTO, uian, nnaer tne act or uarcn 3, i7. fabacription 93.60 price 6, 1911, the year, at the postofflce, SO cents the month Sworn Circulation 1915 Saving Campaign The business statement of the Metropolitan Life Insurance company (or 1921 contains interesting matter not generally found in the statement of a financial corporation. It relates to the human side of a great business. The company's assets are more than one hundred and fifteen million dollars and its policies outstanding are more than twenty-fivand a half millions. While the year 1921 In the popular mind is put down as-- a year of dull buslneMg, life insurance has been an exception. The Metropolitan Main held the record among all companies in the world In 1921 with 11,564,789,607 new insurance placed on the hooka. Its assets increased more than one hun dred and thirty million dollars, and Its Income was 138,462,919 more than it was in For many years the company's principal business was industrial small policies generally held by the working men of America and their fam ilies. But lately the ordinary insurance, where the premiums are or anpaid quarterly, nually, has so increased that this branch of the business now exceeds the industrial in amount. In accepting the opportunity for health and welfare work, the company extended for free nursing service given to Industrial policy-holder- s so that last year it was effective in 2,800 cities and towns and the nurses made more than 2,100,000 free visits. Arrangements have been completed by which employers, insuring their employes under group policies, receive the benefits of the nursing service and welfare literature. In making their weekly calls to col lect premiums, the 16,000 agents dis tributed booklets and pamphlets deal ing with health and disease, telling in simple language how to avoid prevent able diseases and what to do if the policy-holdeare sick. More than twenty-fiv- e millions of these pamphlets were distributed In this way last 'year. In connection with the Society for the Prevention of Tuberculosis, the company is conducting a great experiment at Framingham. Mass. This city was selected as a typicat American city with a popula tion of about the average character. The company financed the Tuberculosis society in a demonstration to show what proper municipal health regulation can do toward wiping out this disease. one-billio- e Figures Justify Protests Our city brothers will find it hard to get away from the story of injustice to the farmer when it is told in cold figures that defy denial, figures now given for the first time by the National Bu reau of Economic Research. We learn for example that the net value of the product of agriculture in 1920 was $9,853,000,000, This was 15 per cent of the total net value of all the product of all industries. This amount was available for division among farm operators (including owners and tenants) employes, land lords and mortgage holders. Now let the city man get out his pencil. The number of persons gainfully employed in agriculture is given as 10,951,000 or 26.3 per cent of the total gainfully After deducting from the $9,853,000,000 the. payments to mortgage holders and landlords there is left considerably less than 15 per cent of the net value of all industries to be distributed among farm operators and employes. The answer is that 26 per cent of the real worth while workers, received less than 15 per cent of the national income. The average per cent of total income going to agriculture in the ten year period is shown to be 17.7 per cent while the workers during this period are found to foot up more than 26 per cent. Of the total gainfully employed, the 1910 census showed 33 per cent engaged in agriculture, and this at a time when many workers ordinarily employed in agriculture were still in the cities not yet having returned to the farms after the war. Also it should be remembered there are many workers, members of the farmers family who are not receiving wages and so are not counted as gainfully employed. em-ploye- d. Mixing Brains With Steak An enterprising butcher in a little town close to the big city of New York has demonstrated at least to his own satisfaction that the brains he uses in his business are better money getters than the brains he sells over the counter. He sells porterhouse steak just like his competitor, but he sells twice the quantity, and all because he found a way to turn into appreciation the silent protest of the housewife who always has been resentful at having to pay a high price for the end of the steak which when cooked ordinarily is waste. Sensing this resentment our thinking butcher found a way out. He cut off the end and left the body of tne steak thick and compact. Then he put the end through a meat chopper, patted it into an attractive form and made of it an addi tional tenderloin. The effect on the housewife buyers was elec trical. Now our friend is known as the butcher who specializes in the best quality of steak, and he gets and holds the majority iz. semi-annuall- ! The lack of housing space in so many cities of the country, due to the lack of building during the war, caused the Metropolitan to make a xystematic and widespread effort to build new moderate priced houses and apartments. During 1920 and 1921 the company loaned, and pledged Itself to on new dwellings loan, 168,080,000 and apartment houses providing homes for 17,744 families. In 1921 the death rate among indus s trial reached Its lowest Point 31 per cent lower than it was ten years previous. The rate from typhoid fever decreased 71 per cent; from tuberculosis. 49 per cent; from Brlght's disease, nearly 30 per cent and from infectious diseases of chil dren nearly 37 per cent. The records kept by the company show that, com pared with 1911, there were, in 1921, 55,000 fewer deaths than there would have been If the 1911 death rate had prevailed. While there has been general public health movement and notable progress in medical science and sanitation, whicn contributed in part, there is evidence that a con slderable factor in reducing the s death rate among of the company has been the widespread health campaign carried on by the company. policy-holder- policy-holder- HIGH SCKOOL FROVO COTES Plus the brains to think out the plan he had the brains to carry his idea to local attention through his local newspaper in stead of waiting for the. slow mouth to mouth method of spread. ing the news. Hence his financial reward came to him f over night. Mixing brains with merchandise is as necessary to successful trade as mixing brains with ink is necessary to successful writing. Your rent money is paying good dividends on the landlord's Hypomoniaes This same money applied toward a home of your own will pay even greater dividends TO YOU. FIRE THE LANDLORD "hypo-maniac- full-fledg- Select a design for a real home and ask about our free building service. ed . Landlords and rent receipts are not stepping stones for prospective home owners. Provo Lumber Co. "QUALITY AND SERVICE" Phone 104. Box 251. Provo, Utah. lit im NOTICE OF AUES-tUnion Vf . Prove. rnncip Utah. Notice Is meetlnc of the board', 5"en, -r- per on OurMomammeailts Price 48 lbs. of Straight Grade Flour 48 lbs. of High Patent Flour 24 lbs. Lehi Whole Wheat Flour 100 lbs. Heavy White Mill Run 100 lbs. Light White Mill Run 100 lbs. Coarse White Bran 100 lbs. Best Shorts 100 lbs. Barley 100 lbs. Oats 100 lbs. Mixed Chicken Feed are made of the finest of $1.50 $1.50 material. The designs and the finish are the best and the prices are right. If you contemplate erecting a memorial before Decoration Day, we invite you to come see our fine, large variety which we now have all ready for 90 $1.60 SH.50 S 11.40 551.90 S1.50 S1.75 $2.00 Plenty of Red Rock Salt and Also the Salt Blocks. OUR CAR OF POULTRY FEEDS HAS ARRIVED. Call and Look Them Over. Beesley Marble & Granite Works ( ( t t Wasatch Produce 425 West Center Just South of Tabernacle. Phone 480 HI Provo, Utah. sW , ......... 262 Mary Morris. 282 T. H. Heal 283 T. H, Heal tVi was levied fc ln capital stock of the able Immediately to Scott TO' wretary, at the office ft!? Stewart, Room No. 2 Knd,"! ' &W Provo, Utah. Any stock upon which this W mBnt tnav nm.l. IK. Bth " uaj- vi aiay, 1922 .... llnausst and advertised tat si? unless payment is made bo sold at said office on iSEi 23rd day of June. 1922, at 4 P. m to pay the ment together with delinquent cost, Ing and expense of sale Twenty-fiv- e cents per share n noBOBsmeni may be paid In Work of cleaning canal wil, Monday morning, April 3 192 a..m. Meet at Hm . tools prepared for work. 1 Water will he him uul0tK April 1, 1922. Dated this 13th day of March UPPER EAST UNION A- J r Z 1 ni' J COMPANY, SCOTT P. pupiicauon April STEwS, 171 14, 1922 295 309 334 702 704 705 754 755 774 805 811 812 814 815 816 857 ... .... ... 1000 Miller 1000 Miller 1000 Miller 1000 Miller ..' M. Thomas 5000 1000' 862 Joseph Jenkins 900 M. A. Goodell 1000 1000 913 John Pritz 1000 929 John Pritz 1000 930 John Pritz 1000 969 P. Daynes ... 1000 970 P. Daynes 1073 Wells U Brimhalll.. 1000 1089 1091 1214 1215 1341 1362 1387 1456 1475 1597 1606 1616 1675 1753 1758 1823 1824 1825 1851 1852 1898 1913 1962 1964 19S6 H. B. Cole & Co H. B. Cole & Co..... M. A. Goodell M. A. Goodell R. R. Thorne R. R. Thorne W. H. Child W. H. Child ...... J. T. Clark SOAPS A. B. Naptha, bar 5 Crystal White, bar.... 5 Pearl White, bar.. .... .5 -Bob White, bar. .5 P. & G. Naptha White, ,7s EGGS, CHEESE, ETC. Eggs, dozen 20 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 Cheese, lb Strong Cheese, Cream Brick, lb Comb Honey Loose Shelled 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 cheaper nuts, lb Cranberries, 3.00 3.00 1.00 2.00 good, 2.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 25.00 25.00 .25 lb.... 30 27 19 Walnuts, than canned 80 quart every one 30 Hindmarsh 2.00 TEAS AND COFFEE Tree Tea ...28f . ........ Folgert Shasta-....- Schilling's, Schilling's, M. 4-- oz 8-- oz J. B., lb can 3-- lb 9-- lb 9-- lb 25, Company HaveYour Cleaning, Dying and Pressing Done Right WE SPECIALIZE ON LADIES' FINE GARMENTS SIC DJC WORK GUARANTEED CLOTHES INSURED Tor That Better Service Call Up 809" SANITARY CLEANING AND DYEING COMPANY Plant 54 N. 4th West Provo, Utah. Off ice 804 W. Center. The Only Modern Cleaning Plant in Utah County. Don't use gasoline in the home. Than f a vtAv a a 1. LARKIN-GOATE- It's cheaper to pay for dry cleaning S MORTUARY Licenced Embalmers Phone 161 LEO W. GOATES, Mgr. .25 20tf 40 ..42 Folger's Golden Gate 45 45 Schilling's Hill's Red Can 45 M. J. B., can. . .$1.29 CEREALS Corn Meal, bag. ,.25 Rolled Oats, bag. .55 Cream of Wheat 25 2 for 45 Wheaco, Branzos, pkg. 20 'Mother's Aluminum Brand Oats 40 CASH AND CARRV MARKET 464 West Center Street. 13.15 1.00 5.00 5.00 Albert G. Clayton Charles Shoup ..... Granville Calahan .12 f 18f REGULAR PRICES 1.00 13134 . . . 1000 5000 .. 5000 ............... . . .$2.75 Pork Roasts, lb. 1.00 G. M. Richards..... 25000 2000 C. G. Johnson 1 Lai Gar. Con Tec 0.5 tl 1. as any can, lb. ............... . .15 Flour, 50-l- b bag, $1.40; 100 lbs. Pot Roasts, lb. Prime Rolled Rib Roast, lb. 1.00 1.00 5.00 Mike Sparo Chas. J. Munns P. Robertshaw Bromo Tonettl . H. H. Ellertson E. R. T. Bloomqulst. Grant Dougle J. C. Anderson J. C. Anderson J. C Anderson Lorenzo Jensen ....25000 .... Cocoa, loose, as good 1.00 1.00 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 3000 3000 1000 2000 2000 1000 1000 1000 STal . SATURDAY MORNING SPECIALS We have just received another barrel of that Good Loose Cocoa our customers liked so well. Corae and get a good supply while it lasts. Tree Tea, pkg ..25 1.00 .1.00 50.00 1.00 1.00 L. L. L. L. 21b. 2 lb.! 51b.: 2 Car pkt 1.00 1.00 .50 .60 ...... EIGHT-O- 150 21b.: 2Gai 8.60 .... of Provo Greeiilboiuise PHONE Set J Ask us about Bulbs Dahlias, Gladiolas, etc. Ours art the very best for local climate. 2.00 1.00 1.00 1,00 2.50 1.00 2000 1000 1000 1000 Raynold Barnett A. C. Adamson 2500 1000 Douglas Mooney Warren Shepherd . . . 8500 1000 Ferdinand Keihl 1000 Ferdinand Keihl 600 George Miller . 600 George Miller Wells L. Brimhall... 1000 Wells L. Brimhall . . 1000 B. H. Bullock 60000 1000 W. H. Cram L. Miller 1000 . iwa, an assessment share m The Place With the Right r Irrto.H. Our Greenhouses are Full 556 701 (Scribner's Magazine.) civilization is largely concerned with such Our present-da- y problems namely, the realities which are left over after the idealists and optimists have ceased from their favorite tasks of talking and writing fine things about them. But it may be thought that a physician is venturing on dangerous ground, and not his own territory, when he, too, presumes to write about them. This, however, is an error, because in mental pathology there are cases presented which are precisely like the cases of some of our incorrigible optimists. ," This pathological variety is called by the specialists a maniac ; he is only that is to say, he is not a an understudy. His usual characteristic is extreme optimism, a tendency to see things not as they exist, and to govern his conduct accordingly. In this mental affection (the hypomania of Mendel) the patient shows an unwonted garrulity, restlessness, motiveless journeying from one place to another, emotional instability, the formation of schemes, a slight degree of incoherence, and an incapacity for the performance of continued fine mental labor. "After a paroxysm of this kind, sometimes lasting for weeks or months, he may return to his normal state, although frequently the finer edge of his mental faculties has been blunted by the brain storm, and he has become less acute, less intrinsically ethical, and less receptive of external impressions." In this definition two things are apparent. There is, first, the emotional instability. If the hypomaniac's mental state is analyzed critically, it is found that the basis of it is a disturbed state of the emotions. The slight disorder of the other mental faculties, such as the perceptions and the intelligence, has its origin very largely in a morbid activity of what is known as the affective or emotional life. This is shown in the erratic, or irrational, impulses which guide his conduct and the sentimental-iswhich discolors his views of things in general. n.x.wi The debating teams at the Provo High school have had two preliminary debates with Lincoln High prepara tory to their meeting American Fork NOTICE OF SALE. and Pleasant Grove in a triangular debate to determine eligibility to the State Debating Tournament in the Syndicate Mining A Milling Co. Prin Spring. The members of the Provo cipal Place of Business, Provo, Utah. High team are: Cessford Kerr, Eph There are delinquent upon the folHomer, Melba Dastrup, Cannon Jones and Cecel Broadbent. Mr. Sterling lowing described stock on account of assessment No. 10, levied on the 8th trcanbrack is the debating coach. day of February, 1922, the several Another medal was offered to the amounts set opposite the name of the students of the Provo High school at the chapel period yesterday morn respective shareholders, as follows Shares. Am't ing. This is to be given by Mrs. Maud Cert No. Name 9 A. J. Olson .......100000 100.00 B. Jacobs tor the best eifort in ex temporaneous speaking. Details of 25 Raynold Barnett .. 3000 3.00 the contest will be announced later 42 Parley Larson 1.00 1000 54 Geo. Scharman 1000 1.00 Much interest is being shown in 64 O. D. Collette 1000 1.00 preparations for Girls' Day. On that 65 O. D. Collette 1000 1.00 day besides the chapel program, spe 90 C. H. Dehner 1000C 10.G0 cial issue of the rrovonian, bazaar, 130 John Nesbit 12400 12.40 vaudeville and unique dance, the an6000 5.00 nual exhibit of work done in domestic 170 John Clark .'. 5.00 Arvilla C. Andelin... 5000 art, design and china painting, will be 171 172 Pearl C. Yates...... 5000 5.00 173 Alvira J. Clark 5.00 5000 177 L. W. Johnson 2000 2.00 183 Raynold Barnett ... 3000 3.00 250 Joe Payne 1000 1.00 Take the Landlord Off Your Pay-Ro- ll trade. ... .... t 1&0 4 ) ..al .- -. nuiml to DC SOW 1.00 the largest and most U berate ever tttl Walter Baxdlty 1000 1.00 H. W. Doschs offered by the local high ichook In 1000 1.00 connection, with it, Mr. Cillispie's ad- 2010 H. B. Cols LOO 1000 vanced students will stage a fashion 2011 H. B. Cols 7000 7.00 2025 Geo. L. Hintoa show of unusual interest. 1000 1.00 2031 J. W. Gay S0OO 2.00 Committees have been appointed to 2098 W. L. Roundy 1.00 1000 work out a program for the annual 2101 H. W. Doscher 25000 25.00 commencement day which will be on 2140 E. H. Phillips 1.00 1000 the 12th of May. Some unusual fea- 2141 J. W. Gny .60 tures are beinfj planned to make that 2147 Grant Pemberton ... 500 day the most distinctive event of the 2165 J. Hendrickson .,...31750 31.75 1.00 school year. 1166 Ezra A Stevens .... 1000 6.00 6000 2171 K. P. Buck 1.50 Senior Day will be April 7th. The 2172 J. A. Corbett 1500 senior studtnts are using all their in- 2180 Arvilla C. Andelin . . 2467 2.65 12000 12.00 genuity to aranne a oroftram that will 2193 8. H. Roundy be as worthy of them as the Sopho- 2194 Chas. C. F. Dixon... 32100 32.10 more program was of the under 633S 6.35 2194 W. P. Forford 1.45 1450 2198 W. P. Morfori ..18000 18.00 2211 J. T. Clark Scharrer 6040 6.05 LUCILE PORTER LAID TO RE8T, 2218 John Jacob And in accordance with law and an order of the board of directors made Funeral services were held on the 8th day of February, 1922, so afternoon at 1 o'clock in the Berg many shares of each parcel of such Mortuary chapel for Miss Luclle stock as may be necessary will be sold of Wells L. Brimhall, 19 Porter, daughter of Mr. at the office Utah, and Mrs. O. F. Porter, who died Sat North University avenue, Provo, at 6 p. m., Saturday, April 1, 1922, to urday evening following an operation pay delinquent assessments thereon, for appendicitis. together with the cost of advertising Ben. H. Knudsen presided and of- and expenses of- sale. J. EDWIN STEIN, fered the opening prayer, the benedic Secretary. tion being pronounced by Carlyle (First publication March 17. last Hinckley. The speakers were Heber Knudsen, publication March 81. 1922.) Bishop L. L. Nelson, Andrew Knudsen if ana Benj. H. Knudsen. Members of the Second ward choir, under the direction of Prof. Elmer Nelson fur nished the music. Ben, H. Knudsen dedicated the grave at the City cemetery. The serv. Ices were well attended And the beau tiful floral offerings showed the love ana sympathy of many friends. Provo, Utah fresr Fane; |