Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
on be E | oe al decrease suffering. \“and smallpox on the part of a large PAGE TWO HOSPITALS AID | IN EXTENDING. | SPAN OF LIFE Patients Passing Through Hospitals Become Messen- | gers to People . eee HIGH GPERATING CO: Advance in Medical Science Results in Shortening Time of Illnesses H uke wuse of s to promite health, Bacon of Chic American Hospit ned the twenty- ident of th oci:fion, who o fifth annual conference of hospital = executives, trustees and nurses here toda. Mr. Bacon said that the thousands f people who piss through hospi juring a year hecome m } ood health in their respective homes d communities, and thus spread e good work of the institutions. Hospitals make public health r vice possible and reduce the death| te in cities and towns,” he contin- | “Without the hospitals, physi-| s could not possibly make the at advances which are being re- 1 in medical ». Because of medical of this stes cienc efficiency of hosp tals, the of patients in hospit: less than it was! : ago when this association | started. ut time the cost of caring | rson was about the same ng for a well person, | ans’ fees. Gradually | ade in medical science | installation of labor- | ° ¢ equipment | ns in charge | s in their work. | ocial service, | as that of plus the ph; the advance called for the atories with and high sale to aid the phy Occupational therapy, dietetics and other specialties were also added as departments of the| hospitals to increase efficiency and| “The high cost of running modern hospitals on the one hand and the} limited financial resources of many whom we serve on the other, c,om- pels us to look to charitably-minded | persons in the community for help, to finance the work. Every genera- | tion amasses more wealth than it needs, therefore it is a benefit to humanity that mon and women be- stow their wealth upon standarized hospitals of proved efficiency. It be- hooves us to keep the work of our| institutions before such charitable| persons to the end that*health ray be promoted and life be saved.” One of the features bf the: confer- ence this year will be the enlarged educational exhibition covering two| acres in the Milwaukee auditorium | where scientific instruments and; hospital equipment will be displayed. Stop Epidemic In Philippines, Manila, Oct. 31.—Eradication of | all dangerous epidemics in the Phil- sy] ippine Islands, organization of an efficient commissioner personnel, ang survey of malaria and hookworm in- fested areas preliminary to cam-! paigns carried out with the eo-oper- ation.of the Rockefeller Foundation, were the outstanding achievements of the insular health service during last year, according to the annual Teport of the director of health. | Invaluable knowledge as to the ex- | tent of malaria and hookworm was~ made available for health workers through the survey of conditions in several portions of the islands init- iated by the Rockefeller Foundation, the report says, thus making it much easier for the service to drait plans | for cgmbating the two diseases. | The general birth rate quring 1922 increased, while the death rate be- | came lower. The Tétter showing is | attributed to the general improve- | ments. in sanitary conditions in most | parts of the islands. With reference to the anti-typhoid and small-pox vaccinations which are being given by health officers from time to time, it is declared that fro1 the results obtained, there is ev dence that immunity from typhoid number of the people during 1922 was due to inoculations, Pity Poor Capitalists! PARIS—L’Escalier de Service can’t be accused of permitting any | Harvest Fox Trot Ushers In New Dance Season LOT ROMS Ss nS ee eee oe THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE STRANGE MUSICAL VOYAGE of 'S. S. PRISCILLA PHANTOM MELODY FLOODED EVERY . PART OF STEAMER Men and women danced to music played by no musician on board - Oné of the strangest voyages on tecord was the trip made this month by the Steamer Priscilla of the Fall River Line through Long Island Sound. On the deck in the cool October bir men and womtn danced calmly to music which was played by no musician on the boat. In the fore- Castle members of the crew off watch jigged and kept time to tunes which Were not made by any musical instru- ment on board. Barges are loaded every day with], toal, and ships with bales of, mer- chandise for the ports ofall nations; but only one boat has ever been filled with music—from the quarters of the crew far forward to thy saloon deck of the engers far aft, | from the freight deck below t ppar deck gabove, If this ‘trip had taken place even twenty years ago there would prob- ably have been panic and excitement. Instead of dancing calmly, the pas- sengers would surely have rushed to ind fro. Yet the fact that the Pris- tilla embarked with her cargo of tnusic in a day when radio is a by- word makes the trip no less strange, ho less remarkable. For it was not the reception of music by, radio that was so unusual as the fact that the music was everywhere on the boat. On any. deck, in almost‘ every turn df the boat's superstricture there was the same rendition, to all ap- pearance direct from musical instrue nents, sre Parked on the freight deck forward was an automobile truck which car- tied a radio set to receive entertain- ment out of the air. But its chief ‘quipment was a Public Address System installed by the Western Electric Company and operated by trew of Western Electric amplifica- tionists. The radio reception was not extraordinary—but the program was amplified and distributed uniformly through sound projectors in every part of the steamer where passengers and crew assembled. The dancers on the deck, passengers in the writing room, the grand saloon, the dining room, and every part of the cabins and decks, heard the entertainment simultanec :sly, just as if each were listening ro ¢.2 original prograi. The experiment on the Priscilla Steamed through the waters of three In the oval; waiters enjoying the jazz program in their quarters on Board the S S Priscilla—Dancing on des& to musical program received ARTHUR MURRAY ano ANY FOREST 7 Man’s Part = capitalistic propaganda te creep in| its columns. by and for servants, parlormaids and gardeners all get F 2 dot at publicity. prroget t IN FEW HOURS “Acts Quick, Costs Little, Breil Sickens! It’s a paper published Butlers, cooks, _ JBREAK A COLD “Pape’s Cold, Compound” Arthur . Murray . Sends _Forth Fall Terpsichor- ean Dictum to s New York City.—From the cra- be of jazz and wiggles comes for the season’s first new danée and also the cheering news that dancing is getting easier and easier. Arthur Murray, of New York, of the ‘National !isti- tate of Social Dancing, whose word is law as to new step: has named this new invention of his, “Harvest fox trot.” It was suggested to him by “Saw Mill River Road,” a favorite Broad- eway tune to which it is danced ‘with ‘moonlight and country* at- ene a, *The slenderizing craze is in- ee ease ot dancing,” My, Murray. declares. an effort to get thin, men 1, Take a’ long. slow, step for- ward on the left foot and hold the weight on this foot for two full counts; at the same time ex- tend-the right foot in front, lift- ing it about two inches from the floor. (2. Step forward quickly on hight foot. 3. Take @ long quick. step for. ward on left foot. 4, Quickly draw right foot up to the def eee vipat, ae pause a gecond weight on right foot. Repeat the entire movement, Lady’s Part ocean Ces tat take a’ slow si ‘backward, holding. weight on the right foot two fuli counts; at the sarfle time lift the left foot up: at ‘the back about two inches off tha floor. Ed 3 backward b omeld oy sek foot. = states. It was carried on through tlie cooperation of the Fall River Line and the Western Electric Company. In a sense the Priscilla tgok her place with “the. i Great Eastern gevators of the salt water. Clermont in the fleet of River liner furnished excellent op- portunities for demonstrating the ef- fectiveness of the amplifying sy$tem in providing entertainment for sev- The eral audiences at the same time. route of the Priscilla and her ships is through Long Island S$ and Narragansett most beautiful salt water trips, boats themselves are capacious and comfortably fitted, ferent audiences are to be found on} them at the san | Urges over the radio, The volume of id the in- The Fall which added mu ound Bay, one of the The gentle movement York to Boston so that many dif- time—in the din-| REV. NEWCOMB: * ' INADDRESS That Present Day Standards of Amusement Be Elevated to New Plane Washburn, Oct. 31.—George B. Newcomb of the Humane Socicty gave an address before the McLean County Teachers Instiute herc Among the many things of intere iy piel he saw in a re- ere the first no the United State if Speaking of the edn cath system of New York h told how in/the carlier days of, ou making some of th ore not given to establish- ing and fostering institutions f advanced Jearning; that such were privately founded and endowed but that in more recent years many of these insitutions had peen adopted by the state and large grants made to them. He spoke oi the ‘Brea educational building at Albany tite seat of the state’s regents system. Mr. Newcomd told the institute y shoe— { The the decks where travellers he scenic side of trolled that those in each part of the boat were under the impression that they heard thé The ‘horns which music were inc&nspicuous and most of the time unnoticed, here was an impression that music came from across the water, a fact aess of the programs. Bi houses and .music fr a glamour about tr have in any other “Dange music pl: sn’t no place on th ing room, the gtand saloon and on|ished and delighted TO TEACHERS that they too were moking history in our own commonwealth, That three outstandimg things should} J woe ag teachers: First nd dis- Listening to Radio program in tl choose life. sound was so con- music direct. distributed the |place. This wa: neans of a s mounted on the picked. up the mi ried to the amp! F requently ich to the effective- inking light- m ‘afar and the of the boat threw vel fr New which it not formly, precisely had_ been. source 0 ot on the boat sted upon look: ught does y folks who boat” aston- bers of the rectional institu | country he said con | ion is that delinguen of the youth is on th a that parental indifferences in such | matters is alarming. He urgeij jthem ag teechere not to be stort |sighted in the school room where {the children are subjecu to them jadding discipline and instruction Jare handmaids. Speaking of the |prevaltng type of amysement of the present day he urged that they ndeavor to elevate the social standards in their mmunities by initiating kinds amusement of which appealed to the nobler in| nature rather than to the | inimal instinct now and which, found ever increasing de | New Church Rule In India May Lead ver or a To Break in Old Caleutta, Oct. 31.—The | church measure, which provides that | india, Burma and Ceylon follow the { examples of Canada, Australia and | South Africa in breaking off from |the Church of England and cstab- lishing a national. Indian church, has involved both clergy and laity in a voluminous newspaper controversy, jand threatens to result in a m | Jamong Anélican religious commun ties. The movement advocating a na- | tional, ehurch in India has beensin- creasing gradually since 1912, when crew and galley forces who had their own concert and shuffled a step or wo in their own quarters. At intervals the radio program was halted, and selections by the Pris- illa’s own concert orchestra took its deck and from there distributed uni: passengers a was being heard fb -} ernment. Indian | the grand salon, , Il over the bi Public Address nd the myste: Ss accomplished by sitive microphone allery deck. This usic which was car- lifier on the freight the as the radio music reproduction to sure [passengers wito of all the music was |Long Island itself and they in- {steamed like a m ing high id low. jladen that the Priscilla c were not a representative gathering of the! Anglican denomanation in India ex-| pressed a desire that the church in) India should have full syhodieal gov- | The present sure, which would free the In-! n churcl from the control of Gana! dvocated by the hishops nd by the clergy gencral- lly, but is meeting with intense op- ‘sition from “many of the English] proposed m ‘ose opposed to the measure. hold that the English forms of worship, and the English prayer book, are es- sential to the welfare of the church, and fear that an Indian church, un: der Indian control, .would break away from the English traditions, in respect to both doetrine and ri-| tual. British residents in India, it jis further contendéd, would be tn- able to find a national Indian church congenial to their, interests. The Bishop of Calcutta is anfadvo church. | Trade With Latins Grows | WASHINGTON Uncle Sam’s trade with his Latin: Amerjcan neigh- bors has shown a:decided gain this }year. It will total approximately $2,000,000,000 by: Dee. 31. It amount- Sed to lion last. yeu, “Simple Cold indicate*a‘he: SCOTT'S. “EMULSION” -to"Byild ‘resistance hey should be able to hear selections at. Eventually the fem was explained were cleared up. One elderly gentleman boarded the nusical boat at Newport and insisted hat he thought he had stumbled into Capitol Theatre whose program was entertaining pas- sengers at the time, The first-strange seagoing excurs sion of a cargo of music was a dis- ccess—from in New York the quality of the pleasure of the ened in, Through nd the Priscilla iodern phantom ship . - NOOO BLACK SEA WINS BAD REP’ Piracy \and ‘ibaa Con: tinues Upon Waters = f Varna,, Bulgaria, Oct. 31—The Back is fast winning an unenvi- oie reputation for piracy and law- lessness upon its waters. Seafaring men are terrified by two acts of vio- lence in the past fortnight, and in ome cases have declined to take their ships out of the harbors. The-tale of the destruction of the cate of the prgposed self-governing [ity a Shred wheat } Bulgarian sailing ship Biala was hardly out of men’s mouths, when there camethe recital of how the crew of thé Amon were done to death by Turkish marauders from a city of Asia Minor. The Amon sailed from this port for Constanti- nople, laden with turpentine. A few miles out-she was approached by two large boats. The Captain, not lik- ing the appearance of these strange craft, crowded on all sail in an ef- fort to get back to port, but the motor boats were too quick for him. One approached him from starbeard and the other from port, ang ranging alongside with grappling irons soon had a strong hold. Then armed men went aboard the g vessel and made her their They - overpowered the crew <é th-m to bulwarks and own. and lay j beats davits. Torture made them disclose the whereabouts of the ip’s treasure, /26,000 golden Turk- ish pounds, This was quickly gathered in, and the pirates made a/quick getaway, but before they cast off they set the Amon on fire. Shé was soon doomed, end so were her crew, still lashed to the deck stanchions. Only one maff succeeded in work- ing himself loose. He drove over- board ama swam,to the Bulg: shore, where, he related the stor: oi See a SLOPE COWBOY ENDS LIFE. Dickinson, N. D., Oct. 31.—L Weathers, for several years promis nent among the cowboys of the Dick- inson, Medoro, ¥ X range coun- nd for the last two years “rid- at Casper, Wyo. committed self-in the try, ing taxi” suicide by shooting hin head, according to intormation re- ceived here, HAIR STAYS COMBED, GLOSSY Millions Use It - Few Cents Buys Jar at Drugstore Keeps Hair mbed ss ae Even stubborn, unruly or sham- pooed hair stays combed all day in any style you like. “Hair-Groom a dignified combing cream which gives that natural’ gloss and well- groomed effect to your hair—that final touch to good dress both in bus- iness and on social occasions. “Hair- Grosom” is greaseless; also helps grow thick, heavy lustrous hair. Be- READY FOR THE DAY’S WORK? - Some foods overtax the digestion and supp , Sourignenont, When in te af bout w hat to eal ere is efyand satisfaction Biscutt ap is the whole ware of greasy, harmful imitations, no oubt Wheat ared in a digest “Gives the shine that’ preserves » _ leather and resists weather! . * ‘There's a SHINOLA shine for every Black, Tan, White, Ox-blood,, Brown For fathen, mother, sister, brother— keep the SHINOLA Home Set handy! dayber, of genuine bristles,cleans ‘the shoes and applies the polish. The pe wool Polisher begs the : peciate ‘ou willie the asty crispness an goodness of the s of wheat. It contains the bran ich i if so useful in pro- moting bowel movement. Itis the most food for the least money. Pour hot milk over the Biscuit,adding a little cream and alittle salt:. nn RR RE