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Show Friday, May THE OGDEN POST WOMENS REALM (Continued from page 3.) the state convention being held in Salt Lake today and tomorrow. Mrs. Woolsey was endorsed at the regular meeting of the society Monday evening. Delegates who will represent Ogden at the convention are Mrs. Fred Edson, Mrs. J. U. Eldredge, Jr., Mrs. Flora Jost, Mrs. Bernard Cash, Mrs. Charles Revel 1, Mrs. Don C. Woolsey, Mrs. George Tillett, Mrs. Molly Light-ene-r, Mrs. Fred Carr, and Mrs. A. Rogers. The alternates are Mrs. Ed. Ilium, Mrs. Christine Droesbeke, Mrs. A. D. Batestas, Mrs. Vernon Eldredge, Mrs. A. Liddell, Mrs. Edith Jensen, Mrs. Nellie C. Holmes, Mrs. P. Anderson, Mrs. E. I Marris, and Mrs. C. L Johnson. . ' , Home Culture The annual luncheon of the Home Culture club will be given Saturday at the Methodist church. Mrs. S. C. Porter and Mrs. W.- - & Craven have charge of the luncheon and afternoon's program, which will include a one-aplay and musical numbers. ; Miriam Chapter At a special election held Tuesday evening at .the Masonic temple, the following officers were elected to fill vacancies in Miriam chapter No.' 14, O. E. S.: Mrs. Charlotte B. Stone, associate matron; Bertha Olson, conductress; Beatrice Scriven, associate conductress; George D. Darling, trustee to succeed Ralph D. Roberts. The regular monthly tea of the chapter will be held Monday, May 19, at the temple. Mrs. Frank Parker is' chairman of arrangements. A musical program and kensington will be followed by tea. Women's Benefit Association Representatives of the Women's Benefit association of Utah and Wyoming will meet in convention Wednesday, May 21, at the Elks club. In the evening a banquet will be given at the United War Service club room In the Kiesel building, of which Mrs. Ray Pearson is general chairman. Other committee chairmen are: Program, Mrs. Don Woolsey; toastmis-tres- s, Mrs. Clyde Gale; reception, Miss Jennie Prout; decorations, Mrs. Will Richardson; membership, Mrs. John Holden; music, Miss Martha Chaussee. Rebckahs The state assembly of the Rebekah lodge will be held at the W. 0. W. hall, 2425 Grant avenue, Monday and Tues- -' day, May 19 and 20. The meeting will be in connection with the Utah grand lodge of Odd Fellows which will be held the same dates. Mrs. Frank Cleve is the local member iu charge of rangements. Monday evening a reception will be held at the Hotel elow lor all visiting members. Queen Esther . The regular business meeting of No. 4, Order of ?ueen Esther chapter .Star, will be held Friday, May' 16, at eight o'clock at the Masonic temple. There will be initiation ceremony. The annual bridge luncheon of Queen Esther No. 4, O. E. S., was held Saturday, May 10, at 1:30 p. m., at the American Legion chateau. Over three hundred guests were served a very delightful luncheon preceding cards. Tulips, pansies ct - , . Demonstration Given CHICAGO HEALTH Odd Fellows and Of Telephone Marvels Auxiliary to Hold HOUSE OPENED BY Annual Meet Here The age of miracles returned to Salt Lake City last night of the IndeCITY OFFICIAL The annual ofmeeting A large crowd sat and Odd Fellows and the spell-boun- vice-preside- nt on w di-ro- ot. To prove that he heard the the subject of the experiment music, beat time with his hands. Mr. Grace wag the device there was a demonstrating roar through the room like a speeding train, the sounds tremendously amplified com-in- g from the contraction in Mr. Groces jaw as he bit his teeth together. They came through a micro, phone which picked up the noise produced by the contraction of the muscles. Mr. Grace explained that this phenomenon kad recently been discovered m the laboratories and explained that it was attributable to the fact that and surrounding tissues an made to act as one plate of the condenser receiver, the rosulting vibra-lioof the d being by the brain as speech, music, or whatever sounds were impressed upon the original transmitter. Mr. Grace said that the sounds could be transmitted simultaneously to at least three persons holding hands. It will not be long before you will go to a doctor when you have heart trouble and he will place a special SitSfW said in your chct end connection with the reproduction of heart beats. "The doctor will then get out a record of heart beats which he thinks is most like the sound of yours. . As soon as h the one which corresponds he will diagnose just what is the ith your heart by comparing it with the records made by a famous heart specialist. The artificial larynx was demonstrated with the aid of a bellows. The bellows, Mr. Grace said, would take the place of the wind which would come from the lungs of the dumb person. ,, The words were formed by the lips and the tongue and the air reproduced the sound with the use of the artificial voice which much resembles former Dawes famous pipe. "You carry this voice around in your pocket, Mr. Grace . ear-dru- m ns ear-dru- m Vice-Preside- WHAT PRICE HEALTH? "save" a little by doing your own washing, but will it buy back youth? You may No woman ever "aaved", enough by doing her own washing to make up for the sacrifice of youth and beauty and health. Let us lift this burden let us make each washday a holiday in which you can do all those exciting things you have always been too busy to do before! Just phone for service when your bundle is ready. Ogden Troy Laundry & Dry Cleaning Company Phone 2074 Let the LAUNDRY do it d almost unbelieving in the auditorium of the West High school as they saw and heard Sergius P. Grace, assistant of the Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., of New York, givo a demonstration of marvelous discoveries in sound transmission at a public meeting sponsored by the Utah section of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. Mr. Grace had given such an a few hundred years ago, he probably would have been burned at the stake for witchcraft Mr. Grace came to Salt Lake City through'the courtesy of President F, H. Reid of the Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph company. The crowd of interested spectators Jaw th artificial Iafrynx with which the voiceless now can speak, and they heard it used. They heard the music of an oicheal tra "filtered' with only Certain, tones being reproduced. They "heard'1, a picture pass over a wire to be assembled at the receiv. ing end. They heard the palpitations of the heart of one of the audience magnified. T They heard how the noise of the movement of a muscle would sound were the human ear sensitive enough to detect it They heard jazzy mu ale inverted. They listened to speech inverted and then transposed to its understandable form. TheP kanj, peech scrambled into an unintelligible mass and then reassembled. , They heard a voice at one end of a short telephone line and waited sev-erseconds to hear it reproduced. And finally they saw a demonstration in which music from a cabinet, which could not be heard by the audience or the subject of the test, pass through a wire, through one man's body and into the subjects brain inter-prote- nt lie told of one man of Virginia is voice who, cured one of the artificial larnyxes and returned to his work as a salesman. With the use of the artificial la ray z a person ewi speak across the continent by telephone. For those whose vocal cords are paralysed a "synthetic lung has been developed. Another interesting phenomenon was the latest thing in alarms for safes. Merely byburglar a dropping penny on a steel surface, similar to that of a vault, a sound was set off like a burglar alarm. Mr. Graces demonstration of delayed speech was particularly interesting. Speaking, into a transmitter he was able to delay delivery of speech to the loud speaker for four and one-ha- lf seconds, and also to cause at will electrical echoes so that the words were repeated one, two or three times. This delayed speech has a practical application in transatlantic transmission, preventing howling. One of the most amusing parts of the evening for the crowd was when Mr. Grace scrambled speech electrical-y- , inverting it so that high notes were low and low notes high. The speech was then unintelligible. But he showed that an electrical brain, as he called it, could unscramble the sounds and translate them into English.. In this scrambled gibberish the words "playe-fee- n krinkenope spoken into the was unscrambled and tame out tele-pho- ne and bridal wreath were used in profusion throughout the chateau and on the tables. Mrs. Rose C. Whitley, Mrs. Gladys Wikstrom and Mrs. Lottie King were in charge of tee luncheon. Mrs. Maud Lower, Mrs. Luella Cortner, tables; Mrs. Ina Worthington and Mrs. Mae Fackler, tickets. All seemed to have a very enjoyable afternoon. The regular monthly tea of Queen Esther chapter, No. 4, O. E. &, was held Wednesday, May 14, from three to five, at the Masonic temple. There was a splendid attendance. Mrs. Mamie Hyland was chairman in charge. pendent Order uT &S First Health House is Actually Attractive; Structure-Buil- t by Stay d Wednesday mW will preside at the evening Meeting. Hotel An informal reception at the follow will Bigelow lodf of the Joint meetings wiU be these stenographer and the Rebekah assembly ination. for thS aheld Tuesday morning at the - r. except in the case of person. grand ball J. W. Randall, of Ogden, wUl premaster, and Miss Sudheimer of side. A joint home committeeconwill and Wyoming Utah, Nevada vene at the same time. The grand also lodge and the Rebekah assembly at 1 will convene Tuesday afternoon o'clock. A grand sires' conference, comprising officers and past officers of the depaSa Svsrjsss: i Chicago Department .(Health hJS Is Antiseptic and Beautiful; president, will preside. Has Rooms for Isolated Cases; f grand rtEfoJdSRIdtt! i&& grand lodge, Rebekah assembly, Mrs. F. R. encampment and patriarch militrant degree at 7:30 oclock. council, will convene Tiwsday If you asked a physical to design Cleve, of Queen City, Rebekah lodge. general m. ia K. P. halL , Grand Sire 2 at p. your house what do you think it would ' of Frankfort, Ky, will M. M. i Logan, look like? asks the national associa- - I00 tion of real estate boards in the eigh- $teefi preside. f J! fig" A public meeting will be held TuesMriM f it0rie ,orthe ESJdlrokiS: 4i JB-,depending on the wood day evening at the American legion chateau. Addresses will be made by A health house built by a committee addition Grand Sire Logan and Bertha Willis of doctors, psychiatrists, and engi- thWlXthof JJf of the A. R. A neers sounds like a miniature hospital to. hosE president Two meetings of the grand lodge with everything sanitary but uncom- - of c.oue' gc Rebekah assembly will; be and the M,Ier fortable, but this isnt the way the and a banquet will held Wednesday, cuut'T-.ftbei given at night, concluding the con it possible. for waste water to enter veniion. y Pj Arnold H. Kegel, fresh water pipes and home of health, as a feature hive often quaffed their bath by the water without knowing it Such con- - Government Positions , ln er to ditions are more than unsanitary. Ty- nZefuSbi ;. Open in Many Lines ecorrectible de- - phoid and other germs have been trac- fects of forluSsd' ALL rtt1 cloveulb OTHV. OBIMI HaJpaiters ALIO akd rAsuias W. " l!h&ta3atWh5! JjjJ ?!2iffe - m ek. - Chicago public school chil- ' , plumbing installations. . . The United States civil service comBrY" The best plumbing equipment manu- - mission announces the following open 4 4h facturers today have changed their laat?3ril!ei "Xe examinations: competitive architecture, vjcea so as to prevent this from hapwa Weaver (teacher of colonial weavquaint pening, but the home owner should se- $1,800 a year,, less $180 a year ing), ln "5 even as cure some expert advice on this mat- - for quarters, den nT fuel, mid light, Indian with not V installations see that their ter and much service, Cherokee school, North Caroclinical thermometer oat- - cover this important point side or in it. lina. , . "The roll-u- p' skylight on the en- . Assistant chemist, $2,600 to $3,100 Need Healthful Domiciles porch makes it possible for the a year for duty in Washington, D. , Made a part of the health show oh closed to secure the direct rays of the or. in the field. . The owner the theory that healthful surroundoptional subjects sun in the privacy of his home, This are advanced will decrease child, illness and inorganic chemistry and ings sky light Is diagonal and is made so physical chemistry. Improve adults, it can be rolled back allowing the air ' tM Chief, division of statistics, $3 800 a tbe first structure of its kind. as as sunlight to enter tee room. office of education, department The Chicago health department has No well year, health lamp can equal the suns of the been working on the plans for more interior, Washington, D. S. lays and the ordinary sunparlor canmechanical lithographthan a year. Apprentice not provide the proper sunbath' owing er, $1,260 a minor apprentice year; heretofore to the angle at which the sun rays are mechanical lithographer, $1,020 a million dollar buildings, received in side windows. It is the ,nIy year; apprentice artistic lithographer, skylights that make it poesible to take direct coming straight down, $1260 a year; minor apprentice artisat home, An isolated room that arerays, tee moat beneficial. A pen-so- tic lithographer, $1,020 a that can be used in case of contagious year, departin health our house can pull ment service, living disease and for a guest room other-- p down the Washington, D. C. shades at tip side' of 'tbs . Paleontologist, $3,800 a year geoun?ln? equipment that sunparlor, roll back the'roof and get logical survey, department of the inij impossible for the home his sunlight. . D. C. terior, Washington, own bat bwater which Bine for Baby's Eyes : Senior stenographer, $1,620 a year, the health department says he often A pale blue paint has been need on e some of the house features. the walls junior stenographer, $1,440 a year; health house nursery senior typist, The house has been designed to $1,440 a year; junior color as a especially adapted to the typist, $1,260 a year, departmental in the head that take development of childrens ores. service, Washington, D. a; Panama their annual toll of almost every fam-I,- y to the health show canal service. Canal Zone cording to Dr. Kegel, its construction and furnishing was under-t- h have been surprised to lean, that chil- range from $131.25 to $168.75 a drens eyes are not full grown for sev- month. Inasmuch as the District of cam-an- d eral Put Elimination and that sharp, heavy, or Columbia and the states of Delaware, th colors nsed hard years colors might retard such develwere those that are easy on the eyes whereas colopment, soft, harmonious and nerves. ors Will Ease the Nerves . . . roomaid it Blue was chosen for-thibecause this is the color of the .'Johnson Lock Shop Br sMe of the features of and one the baby sees often. ; sky M Pljned by the Chica-g- o A Sliding panel in the wall of the . Mowers Sharpened. health commissioner: j room childs closet a with opens Keys, to All Makes of Cars. "There has been a about nervous women'great deal of talk chest of drawers in it, so it is not necPhone 317-- J essary to have a babys bureau in this enough to Sikemny fcom. Baby bureaus have caused many extremely Big, ex- - minor baby acc.identa and a few brok-cluPensive apartment Chicago health com- all Manners of ?a miasioner, because baby is prone to devices in their construction to protect pull out the bureau drawers if left alone, and climbing on them,- often ; shouldn't the home owner be given th loses his balance and falli to the floor. The Best in Radio! . The wall closet also makes it, possi4 Sie rf tennts from ble to make room sizes larger as the ,av? C. W. families. Why closet does not extend into the room, shouldn't the ,other home owner be saved a toit is actually in the wall The house and the babys room in pari I0111 radioT This ticular, is "Dont Proof. ta why tea There is an Company neelth is not only absence of movable Exide .and Willard Batteries objects .which make some mothers days a continual 2586 Wash. Are. Phone 179 ' a.f. Pont Do This," or Don't Do 2586 27 Aye. Washington That. .There is nothing in the babys Phone 179 room that might fall on him, and the toys displayed are "safety" ones with rvS2i. ".for 4S?.ama11 femily of no sharp corners or gadgets teat might hurt him. Incidentally the babys wall closet has a place for his toys so he can be taught care and order. A Relic Room in the basement Is ,ls "o lness in SeJSiiv hf" another feature of the house that has caused much comment. Everyone has relics mementoes with which DR. E. M. FELSHAW they hate to part but old and heir-loodusty b lading into the kltehe? DENTIST are says Dr. KegeL possible for food to iJ He doesnt unhealthy, want folks to give them up, and as any houses nowadays do not have finished attics, he suggests room where the germs on the old enromos can play around to their SIT EccIm BelUlac Osim, Utah hearts content, and not get into the u,. baby's milk. I Iain Baseboards I11?88? ,that ordinarily are JiaPtal. cn be cared for iUCh , de-vii!t- n0 albemt J. S. Campbell Co. REALTOR INSURANCE LOANS 2372 Washington Ava Phones 262 and 2908 WIRING AND REPAIRS ANYTHING dis-simila- Sound-proofin- g, 147 WaaMagtaa sun-bat- Phoaa . , . hs n nie ooes---ar- of-th- e and Battery s k?0 REPAIR Service CHRIS KOCH 2223 Washington Phone 721-- 1 BEFORE HOUSECLEANING Equip your windows and doors via Federal Metal Weather Strip. Special Spring Prices! J. G. TEUSCHER CO. Phone 3053 t American Over Shingle INI de-co- other-visito- rs SSI ELECTRIC Avtaa. Night, IIB1 AUTOMOBILE rly fr ELECTRICAL THE LIGHTHOUSE ,r C-- Bii Star. BSLtca. OGDEN, UtjS Tha - I?? bbe, 16. nw. Co. Waahiagtaa Anaas Mmm 4471 AMERICAN ASPHALT SHINGUi Can aae Sm Ua par Eatiawtaa Aa4 Tmtl PREPARE I NOW . : , o, huK sound-proofi- de h8 ng for Old Sols scorching nji by having awnings placed above the windows of yrar home. Apex ...Gilf illan RADIOS - IVERSON Battery and Radio en-ti- re I DAN WADMAN TENT & AWNING 23rd at Kiesel Phone $39.50 SPECIAL . Buy It For Mothers Day! EUREKA VACUUM At The Utah Power ft Licit 18748 Phone-340- BEFORE BUYING TO GET RID OF 2S;, ttyond speaker r u bMebo.rt, -- Railroad Watches Diamonds One-ha- lf Off the Regular Price. 278 25th St, Ogden, Utak VIADUCT Fertilizer K. Many teU us this is the only fertilizer that will rid a lawn of weeds and dandelions. . telephone com. expleined that thb Je it pomible nbi'!?, wor? it.SS.2fM- - b Motor Co. Wat&s-Kimba- ll sSTfSS S. re. Stef Office USE of th U Loan . DANDELIONS Particles ir-riUte the nose and.Dut .throat and an. the cause of many head ills In detu Unde Sams . SlvLi .j-- See al'c ih S49 . i SiTT .u. 5m CO. Nnhct & Groedoia 183-- 5 Twenty-fourt- h Street A Cash and Carry MsrW at Cash and Carry Price for Cosh and Carry People US lfbortorie. employe tsoo ll9o3o(MS,.?jn S1 Met of Used that have been made have aaved the telephone company and the public hundraW COAL RANGES mUlioa. of dollar,, he how lh badin, coil ,JS Terms! 2174 Washington Avenue it Home of the Best Fruits and Vegetables jbje.no lanter than th. ordin.ryV" at the Lowest Possible Prices! ?nt ll the de-of pcrminvar toeethev W,4ila nw iuculating material known f gutta, both products of the laboratories, make possible the th?1 cable across te,eP"nc Atlantic to veknmSS in SMS?!ScaPeCted the M U8- - OPEN DAY AND NIGHT ! V Across From Tabernacle. Contraction11;0,, 40 8tart withl" , ' UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. P. C RICHARDSON GRAIN CO. Hay, Grain, Flour, and Gardra and Field 248 21th Street . , 7Jj a |