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Show : rjiONY ERTJXO (top), who, with' i Charles D'Stafor (bottom), j were in Salt Lake five days before the Standard hotel wa3 wrecked fcy j dynamite, the police say. j 1 ,.,.,", tt i' lV i 'A l i ikMtWf'''' '"TW" ' i A i C'S I " f h " " I1 r 1 1 A f ' ' F v " ml t 'I X- 'A I.J rl N Advocates Cooperation of Women's Clubs With City Clinics. Speaking before the Catholic "Woman's league yesterday morning, the Rev. C. B. Moulinier, president of the Catholic Hospital Hos-pital association of the LTnited States and Canada, urged upon the members of the league co-operation with the clinics, dispensaries dis-pensaries and hospitals of the city in rendering social service. He proposed the founding of a hospital social service auxiliary to aid in curing disease contracted con-tracted in industry by those classes who are unable to secure, through lack of means, the necessary treatment of their ills. He declared that a health committee which should care for the poverty stricken would do a tremendous part in the community. His discussion included a review of the problem from child welfare wel-fare work to all phases of industrial medicine and surgery, with the aim, first, of preventing disease, and, second, of curing cases past the primary stages. He advised close unity of purpose and interchange of ideas and methods among health organizations of the city, declaring declar-ing that co-operation will prove extremely extreme-ly beneficial in eradicating the evils attendant at-tendant on poor working conditions and postponed treatment of diseases and injuries. in-juries. Close watch of the morals and well-being' of those who come immediately immedi-ately within the care of the Catholic women was also stressed in the address. Tho Rev. Mr. Moulinier, who is a regent re-gent of the Marquette Medica! school at Milwaukee, "Wis., said that tho hospitals of the city show a high standard of efficiency. ef-ficiency. Acting with the American College Col-lege of Surgeons, he is bending his efforts ef-forts toward the standardization of hospitals hos-pitals throughout the country. He urges thorough organization and co-ordination in all the departments of the hospitals, the keeping of thorough and complete records of patients, and the establishment establish-ment of complete modern laboratories for the immediate needs of the institutions and for research work. The Rev. Mr. Moulinier has built a reputation as one of the best-informed men in the United States on hospital standardization, and early in the year, with Dr. John G. Bowman, director of the American College of Surgeons, made an inspection trip covering practically the entire United States in the interest of systematization in the many institutions of the nation. After visiting hospitals in Los Angeles, the Rev. Mr. Moulinier plans to return to Salt Lake before returning to the east. |