FRESH AIR FOR TWO WEEKS. ~ Seventy-Five Ill and Infirm Are Enjoying Camp Life.

July 22, 1909
FRESH AIR FOR TWO WEEKS.

Seventy-Five Ill and Infirm Are En-
joying Camp Life.

Located on a twenty-acre tract of land just two blocks from the end of the Swope park car line is the Fresh Air camp conducted by the Salvation Army. Seventy-five persons a day are enjoying camp life.

The camp is in the main for those who are ill and unable to provide the necessities of life. Age is no bar to the pleasures of the Fresh Air camp, and while children only a few weeks old are out there, they have as camp companions some people who are gray-haired and bent from old age and suffering.

Twenty-five large tents provide the necessary shelter while one tent with ten cots in it is used as the hospital tent. The people are given two weeks vacation and then a new lot goes out for two weeks. Captain Garvin is in charge of the camp.