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‘of gymnastic classes, and, most re- " WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1919 Keep Yourself 100% Well for Your Job; Petty Ills of Women — How to Avoid Them DR. KRISTINE MANN SAYS 75° OF HEADACHES, COLDS, INDIGESTION CAN BE AVOIDED—SHE GIVES RULES By Marguerite Mooers Marshall Cops riaht by Th hing Co. (The New York Brening World F you are The Girl with a Job, how many days have you lost this yeur decause of headache, toothache, backache, cold in the head, attack of indigesuion or some other non-dangerous but uncomfortable ailment? if you are The Dmployer of The Girl with a Job, how often have you sighed in mingled e eration and pity over the a» sence for a day or halfday of your cleverest stenogra- pher or your telephone operator? One of the as yet unsolved problems of the seif supporting woman is the handicap of uncertain health which makes her lose more time from her work than she or her employer can afford, and which causes de terioration in the quality of work performed when she ig not régistering 100 per cent, physically, The prov- lem is receiving the interested attention of the Inter- 1919, Prees Yul’ (to national Conference of Women Physicians now meeting at the Y, W.€. A. headquarters, No. 600 Lexington Avenue. And it is from one of the dele- yates and speakers, Dr. Kristine Mann, that I obtained this reassuring statement as to the removal of the git! worker's health handicap: “Seventy-five per cent. of the petty| ~~ oe iMnesses and disabilities of the youn Woman who works can be eliminated By that I mean three-fourths of the Colds, headaches, digestive rule, have had thelr eyes and teeth and similar complaints which harasa|!0oked after more carefully than is women worker) and lessen their em. | the case with the industrial girls, the wlency can be prevented absolutely.” {College girls are far from pe : Rie Stand dus bad oppor- Physically. Their nervous systems danities for the study of the physi 41 [often are not normal, with resultant make-up of modern girls, for éhe has |!"somnia and other troubles, ‘They suffer from digestive complaints, due \ to improperly adjusted nourishment. “Both: college and industrial girls are SOFT,” Dr, Mann added, with jemphasis, “Muscularly they are un- developed, because they are over- civilized, Dr. Augusta Rucker was right when she sad that in certain respects the Stone Age was a healthier ago for women than the present. rom childhood our girls have too little systemo’ exercise of the right sort, and in consequence their muscles are not strong enough, “The self-supporting woman often fails to do anything to correct this ten- dency. She rides to her work, Instead of walking to it, When she has time for recreation she goes into a moving picture house instead of a swimming Pool.” I had been listening to all this most | appreciatively, because I happen to be | the only woman of my acquaintance possessed of 100 per cent. health. 1 have long believed that the physical [Baye and weak spots in the average self-supporting woman do more to limit hor success than any man-made injus- tice of law or practice, “How,” 1 immediately inquired of Dr. Mann, “can 15 per cent, of these flaws be corrected, ax you have asserted? Here is her prescription: “One of the first and most im- portant steps in making a girl work-; er well instead of half-well ts fitting her to a job sho can perform, a job which does not bore her gi for | whieh her physical dtresges ade- quate, Then she ought not to work more than elght hours; I think even nine hours too long a day. The eight to fifteen girls in every hundred who have flat, straight normal backs. “And, while the college girls, as a examined thousands of them in her work as Medical Director of the De- partment Store Education Associa-! tion and of New York's Health Clinic for Industrial Women, as conductor cently, as Director of the Civilian Worker# Branch of the Ordnance De- partment of the United States, Then, too, instructor and lecturer on hygiene at Smith and Wellesley Col- Jeges she has had a chance to ob- serve the physical development of the college «i “I believe,” Dr. Mann told me, “that tt | ! Fashi 0 | . ATTRACTIVE SUIT | AND MODISH STREET FROCK FOR YOUR SEASON MIS SUIT IS DEVELOPED IN ASVANAL BROWN DUVET YN Wire SUL Ae ANS BI esocers SRS Patatan Carnean Suse SIMPLE STREET FROCK AVY BLACK Ri eT RIMMED IN ' AN Lik ROSETTES. Merve Joe. PeDom WARDROBE trouble with long hours of labor for Michigan to the Black Fills of South ee Brun, the greatest problem confronting us! \, ichiga ack ‘ os es dey ig the health of our 7 | youne women is not the immediate Tiakota asthe sald fucene dave of from Bull n inviting him to 4 Dead- » effect on them of the : . 2. sheriff of the | Wood festivity, women. It Is perfectly true, a8 the! it the attersefte “4 we labor Itself 1s79, “He was the frat Bheniff of the)” wctorious revival of Indian tradle physical examinations during the! 3?) ot. They come out Glatelct, When Inimemget he ues an | a histor: and renewal of | Of shop or office too exhausted to ‘unending store of wild and woolly an- ‘ mrory. &) al of an- Graft proved, that many of the) make proper use of thelr h " cient customs with unprecedented in- physical handicaps from which OUT) freedom, Th clr hours of ecdotes covering anything from In-| es it ran, “Hollow Hor | freedom, : : i ae tio} i E orn Girls are suffering also ure borne by | "recom ey ane not to stop} dian fighting to stage robbery and | Povilvnn Ome hire a our young men. But I think health | Siney “tun hat they are disin-! lynching parties. These rare periods) nis the writ h {a a more inyportant thing for al}, jor nome’ Sona: of - sport - oF of reminiscence usually followed the 4 the writer stealthily Noone tae ente ie the | PUNY. Feoreation, uppearance in the itinerary of the|tried to stalk himself into a position mother of the race, and on h 5 3 peespouriehias nt and improper = pencucrat . Roosevelt campaign train of a moss- peeps ids mule to writing lis jourlshment are resp ® fo s vete: obiography. neares m physical fitness the health of the next) of tng rulnor alleeate of 1% pips e¢ wIIe . 22 66 2 33 ony: ° ° ° whiskered, wound-seared veteran of came tot was oie Bet ie 4 t generation largely depends Me woman ulite an attie t il onan the rough-and-tumble ploneer days] cam Seth 5 out Tisen Trey Mann gave me some tig. | Neo. Work® And tor her Ino of propér ’ : who came ‘down to the railroad|# Tagged grave on the ridge above jave me ec | vigor. In this conn 4 “ ' Deadwood Gulch and said: ures illustrating: the physical defects that a minimum ieee) snaaider! track” from Atty to dive hundred miles | TE TTS Barat rot the of one large group of industrial! necessity, It ; er is al By Neal R. O'H jhat, Millinep works the other way./an open season the year round,|to “get a look at Teddy,” and, on en- Bloux got the min. women. ‘Twenty per cent. of this} is th would differ accord. | . @ . ara, | Puts a few rabbits, ducks and squir-|Tatest style is like the latest election | countering Seth Bullock, engaged in a |ister a week after I got into the hills, oJ ing to © cost 7 Sor res Publishing € (The Now " vening wid) a ow gic “¢ el ec~ ve " g "7 mroup have been found to need eye-|isennty, bat aie erry _ | eee hacks cr srcna Gad tenes eet oe tee na | lt Into a hat and says a few magic | extra—good for half an hour, Hats|mutual reunion of Wlisteringly affec We bag - awful time getting to lasses,” she sa itty fia’ Pe? large snough to acaula de ways be Ae Je: Hh sao. of Bemine Bad 36 MUN ShOND a juss dance now and words, Worls generally eound ke made to wear out and that's|tionate invective and ortminad be, Dis 49 . It was one of the toughest cont. ghould have their teeth attended | oat and dress healthfully, ay thelr headwork are mil Mimiad hape or shift the colors, Eighty dollars, what they do—wear out fast. Only|to the great Joy of all privileged to bit eo pigs Lye , MiEets five gar cant. are uttering |. y re Al ah ; Kuss and feathers are the backbone | thing that goes through @ hat quicker | hear. in his later years some of Seth's old from digestive troubles. Eighty-five or girls properly fed and not im- Once in a while the linotyper | and the gals come flocking In. Some- of the millinery bia. Customers pro- | than a. woman is a, hatpin Of himself the old Sheriff would] mining claims “came true.” Roosevelt per cent. have something wrong with badosa fh rarer the great ‘hygienic eet he maniane We aus ha laP pms peppaets Ex OPA JOM AR, but the | vide the fuss and millies furnish the} Millies don't have to worry so long |hardly ever talk, In ten years more | made him United States Marshal. Taft th backs. There are only from| exercise : 4 able recreation and ,Henaires, Mistak hed i a . tes price never does, : feathers, Can't bla peacocks for/as half the human race is made up |or less intimate acjuaintance renewed renewed the appointment after Bullock ———== , ce he Eyes i ought to}it seems Not after you've bought Jane will go in to buy a helmet. | being proud when they find what|ot wome And the other half ig{annually in New York, Washington | had painstakingly explained that he GETTING PLENTY OF EXERCISE, ereries Sanieipal gymnasiums and} your wife's fall hat ; a : k : a volour id for $30. Millie their feathers cost. And an ostrich | men to pay the bills. - Only thing that | or the Black Hills, the writer can re- | was a Roosevelt man first, last and all rie \ for outdoor sports for thelr em-| Milliners have two oi Ut | te ner it’s all velvet, Gal thinks | sticks its head in the sand because it! can possibly hit the hat bis is a|member but three times when Seth | tho time. FYwav, 1 stl Ane ee 4 you ployed women. And the women, and spring. Jane that « anyshe means the hat, but the millie | jacks nerve to look the customers in | shortage of beans. talked about himself, Once was when The appearances of Capt. Bullock bl aoa stroxcs ti? need is ought to be taught by @ continuous opening takes a chance Hable | means the profit, Only thing to @) the face, ‘That's how they get gstrich | Should be a boom in the lid crop|he told his often published story of| (he was an officer of Grigsby'’s ‘Third ane! et f | Bnenapnee to play healthfully and|to be held up, _ Miliness agra ne hat is the wire skeleton and what feathers for women's hats—by pick-/ when the janes go into politics, | the train robbers’ attaek on the Wells} Rough Riders) was always the occa~ ee pe | wien ee ea ings to display MiG tea rasta bie mee Tenalne, ¢ ‘il the skele- | ing ‘em out of the bird's tail while|When the gals start throwing their | Fargo bullion coach from Deadwood | sion for Roosevelt to assemble those of Reet use ‘otae line i - mr rae mers for| figure the girls wl rin abet in on a frame in a pleture hat, Millie it's playing hide and seek with the hats in the ring campaign expenses|to Cheyenne. He was sitting with | his friends who sympathized with his Resort Why, man,j(he ealih of the a f-upporting | ihe spring and fall for ‘em in the fall. tikes a skeleton, buries it in @| desert, Simply a case of tails lose,/are gonna jump, A hat in the ring|the driver, “Wes” when the stage | love of the plains and the Rockie r pi 4 take 308 “ie ip! on gonoluded br,| When a hub an 1 his wiles > into dup 2 ane and a lis it for heads win. means somebody's gonna get a trim-| dipped down into the gulch into the| “Come to lunch,” such an invitation atre play | r ne employer toja hat joint, wife looks at the ha ne price of a runabout | Indians first started wearing feath- | ming. It's the guy that pays for the|biack shadows of the moonlight, would run. “Seth Bullock is to be a round of golf."--|Provide suitable working conditions,| while hub looks at the price tag&| If you think the meat frust soaks jers, Redskins picked their own | hat “[ was uncommonly nervous,” he | here and three or four pot-bellied pe Detroit Free Press. i is ond the adiustehont of the|Hub finds in the game of tag he's you for fowl, you want to see what | plumes, Gals pick their wn hats to- | Yes, mates, If there's one thing that's| said, “because ‘Wes’ kept talking about | sons from the Senate. I feel that —_—_— Oe | Worke oO e job; of e employee 7 ry he corner ¢ i store wil niltine 0. pheasant a *rice f \ + a " rece ay sane Bey ; _ : ep yee] Ir, Guy at tt ra r dru: r & bit fi n A pheasant thatjday, but that’s all, Price of ats jRever in low gear, it's headgear, If| the $65,000 we had on and the chances | those of us who know Seth will have a POORLY TRAINED. ere recjeen i A giene up tol sell an ieebas for forty cents, Dut a |e hree dollars a pound, f, 0, b.| was what made the Indians wi d there's one place a guy'll get stuck,|of being held up. Never did like} good time and what the Senators do LLER—Can 1 rorrny to ae - ndardi an on the com- can call it the latest ni¢ ago, 18 five dollars an inch ina) ‘Tough jb learning the linery a millinery parlor, It was one of |‘Wes! anyway. Just as we started| not know will not hurt them.” unity to safegua ousing and rec. -o'-shantera and sell it for fo " ler's: park Jon’ ike loi ° siness, ‘Takes 6 d patience, 1 or 7 ° 2 , see Mrs, Swel- (sue awn || Lf pr end gh wi ne and shant nd sel “t for forty | ; nu p Don't take long to business, ‘Takes time and patience, | those places that's referred to in that|down into the gulch he said he Bullock spent his declining years in aay coue vational facilities, to make physical) dollars, Millie is the only person in| discover that a bird in the hat is |wame as counterfeiting sunging sentence—"Won't you come | guessed it we were to be held up, this}a little frame home on u side streat Maid—She's not ver! f sa def Hite ideal powsble of at-| the world that can stretch ten cents’ | worth two cold storage, Millies learns to trim hats, then customers. Ae Bay parlor?” euid the spider to} was the place, It made me mighty |!" De dwood looking out on the com. ae hone. <| tainment, The community, as well as] worth of burlap on five cents’ worth m the Beef Trust look like the | [t's a feather in the appren t ES AEs Tsay / | meroialise ad aplrit of the new West in . Ww! J; the won will be e Whe 4 fifteen dollars’ Salvation m " . 7 * » re bs Ld ne Very. Eoeer When will i AOD, Wil Oe. the walter whan | ot wire 1 it for Atteon dolla . Army every time she selis ac Carefully burnished condensed milk| “And, sure enough, just as we got|menace of his wrath ‘against ent. ag ee perfect physical well-being is the rule] worth ¢ If you think © magicians slick, you! When she gets enough feathers in| cans and Bovril bottles formed “cur-) to the bottom a man jumps out from s was sufficient to keep the Maid — Dunno. ‘ ape : ee y" for ee gies gone out {and not the exception, Why net a} Millies don’t spend much time try- | want wat nilli Maxician hey cap, apprentice Koes and opens | fey" {0% in| some yack pines with a handkerchieg! law-abidin However mu Tet.—Boston ‘Tran- great national drive, with the health}ing to think up new sty hats \ few magic w and pulls her own parlor hile car esteemed by | across his face and’ yells: ‘Hold lenoy night mur- st of our young women as its goal?” {volish, ‘There's nothing mew unde !ruvbiis, ducks aud squirrels amd mg we Best part of the bat bis ls that it’s | native belles for necklaces, your bands!’ 1 was just remember was still the “Law in the Bric s, On ns Forecast of Winter’s Styles PTEMBER 24, 1919 | WEDNESDAY, SE Sheriff Seth Was Real Stirring Book. Copyright. 1919, by The Press Publis twenty years ago there was s western politicians and catt after dawn, waiting to see Theodore the State of the first time any except intimate seen or heard of Seth Bullock. As the tenderfeet who accompanied Roosevelt as stenographers, report- ers and spelibinders alighted from the train the circle opened to admit them to Bullock's Inspection and they were formally introduced. He was gravely ‘courteous in acknowledging the intro- Iduction, shifting a ish bl leigar, atilt through his heavy thatch of mustache, from one corner of his sardonic mouth to the other without any touch of his fingers, and bowing slightly, After a moment or two of hiy eagle glance of apppraisal most of them stepped back behind the line, in- voluntarily. The last to"be brought from the train on the siding on which the Roosevelt party had spent the night was 4 youthful graduate of Yale who wore a straw hat with a lovely blue striped band, a creamy flannel suit and blue socks and was smoking ja cigarette, The old-time Sheriff walked around jhim without changing his expression, | He did not Jook at the blue hat band, lbut the young man took the hat off and held it behind him; he did not look at the socks, but the youth wriggled so the hem of his trousers would drop lower over them, and he jit the cigarette drop from his lips. | “I am very glad to have ‘seen you, sir,” said Seth Bullock, with the dry- est of solemn cordiality. “And now, mdn,” he added addressing the crowd, “there's a man from the East back yonder I've been sitting up all night to eee and I guess he is up by this time "and he walked back to Roosev t's the rest of the tour. comfortable, “is the West in which I came out to live twenty years ago. {He is one of the very last of t |pioneera, He is clean American of 4 ‘type which bas made the West what ‘it is and which the West—though it does not yet know it—can never af- ford to forget.” Seth Bullock. went from peaceful “Last of the Pioneers,” Death Yesterday Ended Remarkuble Career of Real Man Whose Rugged Character Won the Friend- ship of a President, and Whose Thrilling Adven- tures With Outlaws and Indians Would Make a By Lindsay Denison. N the prairie near the Missouri River bridge at Chamberlain almost New York and candidate for Vice-President. centre of the circle, acting as informal Chairman, was Seth Bullock. It was ok | car, where he occupied a berth during | Seth Bullock was then well over) Ho spoke slowly, always with a rem- fifty, There were streaks of gr@y iD jniscent pleasure in his tone, but wit [his mustache, which drooped heavily | out any story-teller’s affectation, We | at the corners of his mouth. His eye-| waited a long time.’ ‘Then somebody | brows were busiier than most men's! asked, | mustaches, His sharply chiselled nose! “ue what did the man down in tho Ihooked Jike an eagle's beak over his! putch do? Did he shoot again? What jthin lipped mouth. His eyes either! pcos of him? twinkled or burned; they were never He didn't do a thine, sald Bath i nt - co | Tising with a frown of disapproval. revit hatreaiiapa of spe Nats ge “They sent out and found him next day said the polit sein eddy Hkes Dim, ang buried him. He ®as dt but his kind has passed i eat 1 i nee Seth Bullock had a deep knowled Seth ae Kk" ga i hip y "of the Sioux. He spoke of them ie when the oe aoen wat ns “ és sh) ways with a baffling mistuts of ape out of sigh 63 . ation and biting irony. He was Bullock, “Westerner” Co, (The New York Evening World) at sunrise a round-up circle of Nort: le and mining men in the first rays Roosevelt, who was then Governor of In the very Triends of Roosevelt in the Hast had ing how my grandmother on her dying bed never told me nothing about holding up my hands when a man came at me like that, when the lead mules jack-knifed around to the left, and then jack-knifed back again to the right and started back up the ack into er lost a cent.” jsulch and ran all the way Deadwood, We ne seth BOLLOCK Vi BUCK, Wasu.ee. particularly fond of heaping praise on Hollow Horn Bi of the Rosebud Sioux, the silve ong yrator of ‘Ws nation, whose feather-framed, fe xtures were imprinted on the § Hs for many years, Hollow Horn Be Joyed these tributes enormous wr could never get the joke until a several years he ved a te