gest hospital! to do thij li or research purposes. But there li no reason tn the world why a medium-sized or small hospital which does no research should keep such records. It is a waste of time and money. Those are just the most Im portant management problems, which need Improving and stan dardization. There are many oth ers, McGlbony points out. For instance, there are no establish ed lines of authority between the doctors who practice in he ho. pltals and the managers. There are no uniform accounting or billing systems among hospitals. Some charge patients for depre ciation on the building. Dr. McGlbony doesn't claim that streamlining, standardizing and generally improving hospital management will make any drag tic cut in the cost to a patient. It is entirely possible that in the long run It might, he says. But what he and his staff are most interested In is Improving the service which a hospital gives a patient by encouraging it to make the most efficient use of its facilities. Federal Health Officials Start To Streamline Nation's Hospitals By DOUGLAS LARSEN . . NEA Staff Corruponduit WASHINGTON (NEA) One of the small parts of the Presi dent's long-range national health program which did get through Congress has the potential of making U. S. hospitals much better places in which to be sick. Inefficiency and varying stan darda are notorious in the man- agement of hospitals. And it his only been recently that public nealtn omciais ana aociors nave awakened to this fact. It is keep ing patients from getting full benefits out of medical progress. The new law involved simply spells out in detail the authority of the U. S. Public Health Ser vice in doing research on hospi tal management. Ana it directs the agency to try to sell hospit als on adopting the findings that this research might produce. Up until now PHS has been confined to a "brick and mortar" func tion has run the various feder al aid plans aimed at spurring local hospital construction. Dr. J. R. McGlbony. PHS of ficial who will direct the work, explains that the annual hospital bill to patients In the U. S. is about $3,000,000,000 and that an other half billion doilart each vear Is belne spent on the con struction of new hospitals. He says that less than one-tenth of one per cent of that huge sum has been spent on researcn to improve hospital service. And that he claims, is less research money than is being spent trying 10 improve automoDues, rauios or ciotnmg, lor instance. Better Food Wanted Gettlntr hosDltals to serve bet ter food is one of the big things Dr. McGlbony nopes to accom nlish. Food is almost as impor tant in getting a patient vell as the medicine he is given. Yet, Dr., McGlbony says, a jig per centage of hospitals don't run their kitchens as efficiently and cleanly as the average restaur ant And frequently there is scant attention paid to serving weii-oai-anced and nutritious meals. What he hopes to be able to do in this particular Held is una out how the hospitals with the best kitchens operate, and make the information available to all of them. Part of the job is to show smaller institutions how to prepare and serve food without the elaborate kitchen equipment and without the help of full-time nutritionists which are available to the bigger hospitals. - Pharmacy departments In most hospitals need drastic im provements, Dr. McGlbony says. Five per cent of a patient's bill Is usually for medicine. In manv cases medicines and drugs which deteriorate with age are kept on shelves long after their useful ness. New stocks are piled i n front of old and the bottles in the back finally have to be thrown away. That a pure waste, Dr. Mc Glbony says, which could easily be avoided. Reeords Unsatisfactory Still another hospital function which needs standardization is record keeping. Most Institutions keep elaborate records of pat ients, copying the biggest hos pitals. Only reason for the big- Phone Workers Dodge Injury In Freak Accident LEBANON, Nov. 3. OP) Six telephone company workers es caped injury Tuesday in a freak accident that disrupted power and telephone service within a 25 mile radius. Kenneth Sims, manager of the Mountain States Power company, said the six were holding a tele phone wire when it camt in con tact with a 12,000-volt power line. The electric charge, instead of passing on into the ground as it normally would, set up an arc with a 66,000-volt power line on the same power pole. The men i'elt the shock, but were not even burned, Sims re ported. But the circuit-breaker was thrown out with such force at Lebanon it was damaged and circuit-breakers were thrown at Albany, Lebanon, Corvallls etvi Sweet Home as weU. Telephone company fuses were blown out, too, at Sweet Home, and there was some damage at the Lebanon plant The power and telephone serv ice Interruptions ranged from 10 to JU minutes. SPRAY GUN GIVES ALARM WASHINGTON UP) Some one reported a grocery store was full of smoke. Firemen raced to the store, broke open the door and were assailed by clouds of insect spray. The proprietor had hooked up an automatic spray gun before locking up for the night. Congratulations and best wishes to Patterson's Bakery from CROWN MILLS Millers of famous Crown Flour pr2T '-if j-- f vvtMJ W '!,, ' ' I J -"-si S ! p-C J. ir7 L-. I': S7,JW j jV." Ia i'4-.?7!;r-. I Valley Packing Company extends congratulations to Patterson's Bakery Resident of Roseburg and Douglas County con point with pride to this now, fully mod ern baking plant. Thur.. Nov. 3, 149-Tha Naws-Revlew, Ronburg, Org. Sand Dunts At Siuslaw River Mouth To Be Controlled PORTLAND, Nov. 2. W A project to keep shifting dune sand from blowing Into the Siu slaw river, creating navigation and drainage problems, was re ported today. Under an agreement announced bv Daniel L. Goldy, regional direc tor of the Bureau of Land Man agement, public lands at the mouth of the Sisulaw river will be planted to beach grass, Scotch broom and other grasses. Others cooperating are the Siu slaw State Soil Conservation dis trict, Lane county, the Federal Soil Conservation service, the For est service and the Port of Flor ence port commission. Goldy said this Is the first co operative project of its kind the bureau has entered into in the Pacific Northwest and might set a pattern on conservation projects -on public lands. Labor Leader Suggests Formula For Economic Crisis NEW YORK, Nov. 2. UP Mat thew Woll, second vice president of the American Federation of Labor, Monday told 1,800 leaders of Industry and finance that the world economic crisis can be solved by: . 1. Increased productivity. 2. Increased living standards and purchasing power. 3. Adequate "moral and mate. rlalyes, military If need he strength to maintain and sustain, to defend and extend, our basic human rights and freedoms." Woll spoke at th session of the National Foreign Trade conven tion, which closes tonight with an address by Secretary of State Dean Acheson. Commons Votes New Lords' Curb By DeWITT MacKENZIE AP Foreign Affair Analyit Britain's House of Commons has passed a bill which further curbs the powers of the August House of Lords, thereby gaining another notable victory In the eeneration-old fight between the elected representatives of "the people , ana tne ermine rooea no This measure restricts the lords from holding up for more than one year any legislation passed py commons, neretoiore tne lords could delay commons' mea sures for two years. This in Itself is a notable vic tory for Commons, but It cuts deeper than that. It opens the way for the final passage of the Commons bill nationalizing Eng land's huge steel Industry. The preponderantly conserva tive lords had agreed reluctantly to lesser measures for state own ership, but had refused to accept the steel program, which repre sented the high-point in the so cialist program qf nationalization. Now they will have it rammed down their throats, and the gov ernment will be able to achieve this before Its five-year term ends next July. i j .'9 t Lk- ,t- 9 i 11 f 1 NEW BAKERY Patterson's, Roseburg'i wholesale bakery, has moved Into its new home on Short street. Bread fresh from the ovens is wrapped by S. A. Patterson and Ethel Jurgenson, pictured ( I ) above, beside the bread racks and wrapping ma chine. 12) Tony DeCroot rolls dough for butterhorns. 13) George Patterson and Glen Bailey remove bread from one of the large white ovens. (4) An overall view of the ovens and bread racks on the main floor of Patterson's bakery. The lowest temperature re corded on earth was 90 degrees below zero on Feb. 5 and 7, 1892, at Verkhoyansk, Siberia, U. S. Weather Bureau reports show. When a bat gets mad he ruf fles his fur and bares his teeth like a cat. He also gives a low pitched buzz, which is his warn ing snarl. The U S. Bureau of Mines estimates zinc-lead deposits i n the tri-state district of Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma at 66,000, 000 tons. Public Buildings Warm Citizens In Coal Lack ROME, Ga., Nov. 3. (JP Heated public buildings were thrown open here last night to prevent suffering by any fam ilies caught by the coal shortage and sub-freezing temperatures. Less than a dozen tons of coal remained for sale in this city of 26,000 persons in North Georgia. The thermometer dropped to 31 during the night. VAGRANT JAILED Sam Theodore Hotchkiss, tran sient, was fined 520 and sen tenced to serve 10 days in ths city jail In lieu of payment, up on appearing in municipal court this morning, Judge Ira B. Rid dle reported. Hotchkiss was charged with vagrancy, accord ing to the report. Congratulations! Pa Herd on 6 er Coen Supply Company (LonqraluiationA to PATTERSON'S BAKERY rom M & M PRINTERS 504 N. Jackson Phone 823-J Best Wishes for Continued Success to , Peterson's iakery This new bakery is another step forward for Douglas County West Coast Fruit Company Valley Packing Co. Salem, Oregon 70i S. I. Union Arenut Portland