Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FS eae NTT as] Nem UNG Bes AEEU GARE ‘Williams Knows From Experience Poti verter ger aetaal | Williams, Now And oe Mothers, watch your Daughters’ Health * PAGE:TWO : : ii 0 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, ’22 knowing more about the work- Then : 4 - ingman’s viewpoint than any man R . ay. in America ag the result of his : . e : Health Is Happiness exhaustive “pick ‘and shovel” in- _ : - ee . . . 4 * vestigations of working condi- 5 . ‘ : From the time a girl reaches the | sister and sister-imlaw take it and tions throughout the world. : : age of twelve until womanhood is es-' | have only the highest praise for it. It In thig article Williams gives : tablished, she needs all the care a | has been a household word in my The Tribune yeaders an unbiased 3 z ; i . - : : thoughtful mother can give. -mother’s house for eter Mrs. survey ‘otc the tending "i onal ‘ : . j : ‘The condition that the girlis then | KaTHERYN Lynn, 2431 Gladys Ave., ailue stehte zoekt leet AeOrK i oe 3 passing throughissocritical, andmay | Chicago, Ill. i 7 rKer . : 1 ave such far-reaching effects upon 5 * views it. " A $ f her future happiness and health, that | A Little Book Helped Her to Decide Williams left his Job as vice ‘ , it:is almost criminal for a mother or Milwaukee, Wis. — ‘‘My daughter president of a Cleveland steel * . . ‘ i guardian to withhold counselor ad- | took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable concern in January, 1919, and 7 ° : 5 : E : vice. «| Gompound as she was so weak and worked several months as a . i : a Many‘a woman has suffered years | did not feel like going to school. She ‘common laborer in American 5 , Bes . of prolongedpainand misery through | was like that for a whole year before steel plants, coal mines and : " having been the victim of ‘thought- | taking your Vegetable Compound. I roundhouses. ae se lessness or ignorance on the part of | founda little book of yours in our In 1920 he toiled as miner, steel 3 : 4 . a : those who should have guided her | mail-box and decided to give her your worker and shipbuilder in Bri- : 8 ‘ through the dangers and difficulties | medicine. She isnow strong and well tain. 7 uk ‘ ‘ that beset this period. and attends school every day. We In 1921 he worked shoulder to . ‘ 7 Mothers should teach’ their girls | tecommend your Vegetable Com- shoulder with the industrial toil- : pe what danger comes from standing | pound to all mothers with weak ers of France, Belgium and Ger- : : . i around with cold or wet feet, from | daughters. You may use this letter many, getting a firsthand view a4 : $ lifting heavy articles, andfrom over- aga testimonial, ’—Mrs.E. KLUCZNY, of the real work of European E gee, t ae working. Donotlet themover-study. | 917 20th Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. reconstruction. é § oe: If ‘they complain of headache, pains “1 was always feeling: tired and Williamg has written many a cor : © ; in. the back and lower limbs, they | sleepy, was losing in weight and books and articles embodying the . oe wae needa mother’s thoughtful care and | would faint at times. I ‘had other results of his investigations. He ‘ : : ru : : sympathy. troubles too, that made me feel bad- is continually in demand as a : : : ; AHousekoldWord in Mother's House | 1; 1 ‘Tead youn little bookeand heard sete esa oe — - : ‘ oe k : . ; * writes Mrs. Lynd, about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound had : « * ae Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. done them, so I have taken it too, - BY Means i aveer aay . 2 — . i mother gave ae Lydia ES The results are noel satisfactory, Cor. (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service) : g : , a i ; i seti “ 94] : ‘inkham’s Vegetable ‘Compounc 1 have gained in weight.and my bad “GOO-OD! T’ank Gawd! Tomorrow Rind ee ete ee ed axon Pe Renee poe ‘ nai oF ‘Fhe Patinthy: Mary: Roberts when I was 14 years old for troubles | symptoms are gone. I recommend gives vorrk!” g 2 : i 4 girls often h4ve.and for. loss of | your Vegetable Compound to all my That’s what I heard men and wo- 2 at - r % weight. Then after. married I took | friends and you may make whatever men saying in our mine towns every y maximum daily theoretical produc-|These proposala’ will doubtless -be/away for ' good,”, grumbled Nick. the Vegetable Compound before | use youlike of this letter.””—GLORIA afternoon at.5 o'clock when the tip- : tion and, therefore, the higher ito] made again by the government com-|“Where do you stippSse it’s gone?” each child was bornandalwayswhen | Ramirez, 1116 9th Ave., Tampa, x I felt the least rundown. Both my | Florida. : ——_—+ ple’s, big whistle .announced the WHITING WILLIAMS AND (BE “rating”’—and so the bigger share it|misston likely to be appointed for] Nancy pointed to-a tiny speck in good news. The trouble was that on ea 2 -l gets of the cars which do happen to| settling the present dispute. For the| the distance. “There. it is,” she Lydia E. Pinkham’s Pri 'Text-Book upon “Ailments so many days the news was_ bad. WORKED IN U. S| MINES. ’ i Then you would see big, husky men . S| MINES. e, Would Raise Rates. burner in the sitting-room, we av-| “Say!” said Nick, duddenly. “When the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. Lynn, Of course, we could ‘require the}erage citizens buy only about one-| this old mountain::can imove;around ‘this book contains valuable infor:uation. “My Gawd! My Gawd! How can|cuyt themseves down and gave their |ilroads ‘to puild ‘endugh. cars to] sixth of the country’s coal, but by our |ithe way it»does how do we know/we s live? What can do? No vorrk to-|extra hours to those who average|SUPPly 100 per cent»of that peak de-| understanding or lack of understand-|were walking all that time in the SeSeSeSeanana=O@aoo0aaoaoaoaooooeeEE— eee 5 morrow!) {less than 30, then those tive workin: * =n —t If we don’t know about that daily |days of six hours each would wroduce ble! fs that: the “overhead” cost of]ors do in Washington. , miles too far to the right or 10 to | A Thought For Today | ANCIENT CLAMS whistle with its good news. or bad,|more coal than is ordinarily obtained, | ‘tis would raise our freight rates on} The coal dispute is not a. fight/the left. There isn’t’ any path .to} oo a ordinary capital and labor dispute’]jess work, but for a more even divi-} Stand idle most of the year. for jobs. At that the mountain made a quick fieh ! 7 about. wages and hours. According} sion of what work there is. No, a better way to give King] ‘The miners and owners in our coal | swoop right toward them, like a per- Haag and: fullhof :dlory<| eter Sore oe aH D., April a $2 44 cations that bivalves were pl entiful ers are robbing the country for their|nourly rates endeavor to give the|towns a happier disposition would be} work-or-no-work whistle. mous express train, - It looked a8] 694 A ‘ ; . = ae : ‘ itself; and i ful of being glad. | gj ign : swollen profits, According to the|worker something like a living wage|for us consumers to recognize our! It is we ourselves who are the}though the Twins would be flattened | wo: oy, ik Ahe signs of poturnlags by ae Sener Hier men are using their jobs in a basic|a year’s work. upon ordering our coal when we,.want Sen pancakes, but it stopped right n front ih 7 & : d tA? paige of woe. This must not be. Every iin-| x, a and indispensable industry to de Overhead Costly it and nota day ‘before, the wri] E OF | of their noses, not a yard away. pulse toward returning happiness is of Pauueat Fe iaerearre sob eome 30 ‘hours’ work. other hundred: illi ’]be hard to get along with. _ They mountain suddenly. Whistle the “Boss” ed ie Eee ea ar fwill all be suffering from that dis- | THE T W INS | “No, if you mean us,” answered Fatt obneuiane vein of dlgnits ¢oal 4 - D Ww e surface at the ‘ : = % jn_}mess in American industry than any 5 a neither mine owner nor mine work-|workless days. Thtat's. not only (i other. ‘It is called the “Peak and By Olive Barton Roberts tain. 7 D: cated on one of the many creeks that ay flow into the Little Missouri river, LOW) AS HELOOKED WHEN HE be available for the district. ~ furnace downstairs and the — base- | said. Peculiar to Women” vill be sent you tree run their hands through their hair.|to pave more than 30 hours of work mand of our coldest days. The trou-|ing -we determine what our govern- right direction’? We may be 10 the coal. strike looks just like an}Thus, the 30-hour demand is not for|@Verything because those cars would|about wages and hours. It is a fight) guide us here.” ‘ Believing, ye rejoice with joy un- ARE DISCOVERED to one side, the operators and own-| As jt stands, tonnage rates and Coal and all ‘his subjects inour mine | towns are, the slaves of that daily}son on roller skates, or like an enor-| mye heart sometimes grows jealous on the high divides of this section other, something like. 600,000 strong | even though he can’t do anything like own misdpings. Ag long as we insist| bosses of that whistle. out in another minute like two. little fulness; we keep about us the sigas| pipited here. ‘The matrix contains mand a full week's wages for only} pBegides the wages’ of workless men, miners and the coal operators -will ‘ADVEN' “Are you frightened?” asked the GoiuZGeotke Dawson: Monae THERIOT weieodoee It is the whistle that tells us that | unproductive ‘overhead”. of all those {temper which causes more unhappl- | g———————--- i Fe ene cinat asked the moun- "Learn a Word Every Bert McNamara ‘farm, which is: io- er is as bad as he .appears. The|terest on the money tied up in idle Trough Disease” Of that disease, the} ‘The Mountain«THatsWasn'j‘There “No.” ; i i whistle knows that both of them are|machinery, cars, etc. It is also tipple’s whistle is only a symptom ted in the sibllest fashion, " wwhat are you?” 4 a is al: . the cost of pumping water out of, Ss }acted in the silliest fas u : 4 ¢ < Ss wi NVEC’ ™ Prete soll, chat ‘mines of America [and pumping air into, the ‘ack |Our bunching of our orders into our] First it .stood on its head, then] | “Puzzled!” answered the little boy. A peece aids ari cae ~ Wee ote oot minerorage ‘of only passages below ground. Even the air|¢old weather is the cause. For coal|atter awhile, tiring of that, Ih spin “We think you've lost your wits.” | ooo. the second syllable, ” a 170 days and in 1920 an average of|of one day’s pumping-in weighs more cannot be mined or stored at the} around dizzily . for several minutes. “That's the answer, said the moun UE dal acer TYPEWRITERS only 224, The hard coal miners gen-|than the coal of one day's taking- mine in advance without increased|When jt had yighted itself it stayed|tain kindly. Only I haven't lost my] | oh4ion, opproblum, censure, retort rT Aa wakes put for a few seconds, then sudden-| wits. I’m wisest of all. I’m here to ach Sedeee ? 7 . sold and rented erally worked a larger number.” out! Both air and water must be}Cost 4 S \ sabe saAi ‘That is the way an unprejudiced|moved whether any coal moves or Two Proposals ly, without any warning, it whizzed| try’ people’s mattence: 4nd you alae TE Net eoe bits alvcnerc ita witness known as the’ director of|not. Without such attention for even) ‘Lower freight rates in the summer|py as though it were on rollers amd|lose yours at all. 7 : 3 i the U.’S. Geological Survey tells}a few weeks the ordinary mine would and greater favor shown by the bank-| stood behind the Twins. You may go safely over, children. Sate Coe ey eth eens the story of the whistle. become a ruin. ers to the coal users who “stock up”). “Why,, we're past it; laughed (To Be Continued) oh iraconseesatia eee ach inveg iv ‘The story means that ‘between| ‘What is the “why” of all this huge/ i” the warm months—these are two|Nancy. “We must be in the Kingdom| (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service. x 8 8 ebates. 100,000 and 150,000 more miners are|expense of idle money, idle machin-| Proposals made for cutting off the} of the Diddyevyers at last.-The Fairy 3 \ kept in the coal towns that can by|ery and idle men? Whose fault it it?|peaks of our demand and so filling|Queen said ‘it Was just beyond the any possibility be given a full year’s} ‘Well, for one thing we haven't |up the troughs of the miners’ unhap-|Seyen Mountaing and this is the work. At-even $1000 each, their wag-|enough railway cars to supply all|py and demoralizing idleness. ‘ They) seventh.” baa ‘j es alone add $100,000,000 to the cost | the mines when their peak demand| require action by our Interstate Com-| “But look!” pointed } = of our dafly coal. If the miners went | arrives. That’s why the mine” own-|merce Commission and our Federal} The mountain. had m: de a crazy “inside” every working day, they|ers want the men to be in tlie mine| Reserve Bank. _ Jcirele and swung) arpund “iy front of would give us 40 per cent more-‘coal|towns even. though they can’t be| The necessary government permis-| them again. /Them” it seemed to dis- than we could posstbly dispose of.| kept busy. For the more men a mine| sion ‘was proposed by a commission | appear altogether. i And if those who were lucky enough |‘has on its pay-roll, the higher its|called in after the last coal strike.| “I wish the old thing would stay Satins retain thetr suppleness washed this way, says Skinner | } witegswensSo | AMVs | =|): Buy them in the large package ere Bie x for ali the family Cambridge, Mat canes i B Ya S| mt N : E pack Big Sioux Family Soda Crackers in Gentlemen: ' sug silks laundered in, ; : V extra-large, kept-right packages, because We had samples of neem catins, etc. Each” ¢ . YW. | “twenty years’ experience proves that families eat Lux—Peau de OT anibee iof washings the avetaBe eB them in great quantities. Crisp, flaky, tasty—and _ raga ae inva year. Sis 2 i nourishing. One bite and you'll. know they’re : eek chat at the end of eae aa the delé- ‘i the tastiest: Always have plenty on hand. Always the silks had stiffened and im "7 iced particulatly Realy le fresh, because baked here in the West. hreads fray of rough up. We norret Pinot the Goutbe Peau de Cygnes did not “pull ; satins ee ee of eee oe | laut |e ba i eal ys + s! ol! \e Rh At) Z "This we think is undoubteY a3 é | pe ame - ‘FAMILY SODA CRACKERS ae Manchester. Biscuit Co. Sioux Falls, S. D. and Fargo, N. D. Established 1902