OCR Text |
Show The emergency hospital in tho basement base-ment of lhe First Congregational church is now In operation under tho charge of Nurse Swainston and at tho time of writing two patients aro being be-ing cared for, one George Waggcr of Louisville, Utah and a Japanese named Ushylma, a section hand on the Southern South-ern Pacific railroad. Before nightfall Nurse Swainston expects that the seven sev-en beds will be occupied and more beds fitted and made ready for other patients. The staff for the hospital has been increased since, yesterday, and there are now a company of willing workers doing their best to render the best kind of service; Nurse Smith of the Public Health Association who came to Utah for the purpose of a public health survey and who has willingly offered her help in the present crisis; Nurse Titloy of the city school staff who will be the night nurse in charge; Miss Ray Woodcock, and Miss Gerta Woodruff, dieticians; Miss Evelyn Turner, Miss Erma Davidson, Miss Nora Linger, Miss Bess Furlong, and Mrs. Margaret Morgan. The staff of the hospital will be glad to receive gifts of material or of articles ar-ticles such as nightshirts, pneumonia jackets, flannel blankets. A number of screens are also needed. Patients being conveyed to the hospital hos-pital can be assured of the best of care in a building splendidly fitted for the purpose. Mrs. Nellie Cole Dies Mrs. Nellie Barrett Cole, wife of Samuel Parley Cole of Ogden, died at 2 a. m. today at Evanston, Wyo., of Spanish Influenza. Mrs. Cole was vis- iting In Evanston. The body will arrive ar-rive In Ogden Saturday, at 3 p. m. and the funeral and Interment will be hero. The time has not been set for the funeral. Mrs. Cole was a daughter-in-law of Martin C. Cole, 210 Twentysixth street and a sister-in-law of Mrs. John Nicholas of Ogden, Goates Child Succumbs Kenneth Evans Goates, 10 year-old son of Charles H. and Julia Goates, died today' at 9 p. m. at the home 508 Fourth street of pneumonia following an attack of Spanish influenza. TJie body is at the Larkin chapel and will 1 be prepared for shipment to Lchl, Utah, where the runeral will be held Soldiers III Three soldiers werp taken off a train entering Ogden last night. They ar at the hospital receiving attention. One is said to be suffering of pneumonia which developed from Influenza. The other two have comparatively mild attacks at-tacks of Influenza. Mrs. Mary Davidson, 127 West Twenty ninth street, was a victim of the disease yesterday' afternoon. She1 was the wife of- O. M. Davidson and is survived by three daughters and one son, Clarence, who is in the navy, besides be-sides her husband. Midget Actor Dies Karl Trunecka, said to be the smallest smal-lest member of the Singer's Midgets troup, which has been marooned in Ogden because of the epidemic, died last evening at the hospital. Trunecka Tru-necka was 25 years of age and a native of Bohemia. The little fellow had contracted pneumonia after Spanish influenza. There are several other members of this troupe 111. |