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About The Winifred Times (Winifred, Mont.) 1913-19?? | View This Issue
The Winifred Times (Winifred, Mont.), 26 Sept. 1919, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053313/1919-09-26/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
lop THE WINIFRED TIMES VOL. 7 NO. 27 Your Confidence WINIFRED, MONTANA. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1919. The best way we know to get your confidence branch of corsetry and will render you a is to offer a corset service that deserves it. skilled service that assures your satisfaction. Our corsetieres have specialized in every Our stock of the world -famed GO SSAIIIID CORSETS The Original -Unequalled Front Lacing Corsets is complete. From it you may select many only result from a faultlessly fitting corset. charming models, especially designed for the needs of your figure type, that will We guarantee the nt, comfort, style and give you that unconscious grace that can wearing service of every Gossard. Saving of 25c to $2 on every pair of Gossard Corsets No. 241 present price $3.00, our price $2.75 No. 376 present price $4.50, our price $4.00 No. 263 present price 4.00, our price 3.50 No. 572 present price 7.50, our price 5.50 REYI,ECK'S CASH STORE, WINIFRED, MONT. A SQUARE DEAL FOR EVERYBODY 4d...sh $k Jga iluiRIHIMESHIHitatitilt-***-11H1Hie******-111*****-4Elletiolt-e-***Alt***** **-4H1H11-10-1HIRIHIHIHIHIHIrrokSHIHIlre-41-4HIH11-****31(-*-* Certificates of Failure shouid be filed at once. If you had a Federal Seed Loan the past y,lar you should not neglect to file your certifi- cate of failure. By so doing you will be relieved of at least the larger part of your obligation. If you do not file these certificates you are \stuck\ for the whole amount. Blanks may be obtained at either of the banks. Let's Talk Farm Loans. nik- First National Bank WINIFRED, MONTANA pr - ---- MEMBER RESERVE -- ' IHOHIHIHIE*****SHIE-44 Just What She Needed. \I used a bottle Cf Chamberlain's Tablets some time ago and they proved to be just what I neected, writes Mrs. Volta Bankson, Chillicothe, Mo. \They not only relieved me of indi- gestion but toned up my liver and rid me of backache and dizziness that I had been subject to for some time. They did me a world of good and I will always speak a gcod word for them.\ Sentry Box on His Farm. A Cook county farmer whose farm Is not far from Chicago has built a sentry house in the corner of his place from which he can see what is going on near any part of the farm. He oc- cupies the upper room every night and, aided by a dog, knows when anyone is sneaking around the premises. The lower part of the sentry house he 'nee as a workshop. A row of windows in the upper part gives him a wide view of all the surrounding country. Except for these precautionary measures, he says, stragglers from the city would steal him poor or by carelessness set tlre to the farm buildings.—Capper's Weekly. -THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE----- EMMA GOLDMAN MAY BE DEPORTED FROM U. S. Washington, Sept. 20.—Federal war- rants for the arrest of Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman. charging them with anarchy and looking to their deportation, have been issued by the immigration authorities. The Goldman woman is finishing a term in the federal penitentiary at Jeffer- son City. Mo., and Berkman is con- fined in the penitentiary at Atlanta, Ga. Both were convicted of obstruct- ing the draft. They Were Prepared. The wife of an Indianapolis mer- chant was recently quite sick. One day after she had improved a bit and her seven -year -old son had been permitted in her room for a little visit, she voiced the thought that had worried her all the time while she had been ill. \Ted she asked. \ - hat would you have done if mother bud died?' Back came Teddy's startling ani ewer: \Oh the girls could have gone to grandmother's to live and papa and I—we'd have gotten us a new wife right away.\ THINK IN IN TfltHST—SAV/1-- — ----THINK IN IN TERE5T—SAVE---• PRICE FIVE CENTS CAPITAL AND LABOR STAGE BIG BATTLE STEEL WORKERS OF COUNTRY WALK OUT OF SHOPS TO EN- FORCE THEIR DEMANDS POLICE BREAK UP MEETING I I Pennsylvania State Constabulary Use Farmers' Prices and Manufacturers' Prices -- David F. Houston, secretary of agriculture, does not assent to the theory that the prices of farm products should fall before the prices of manufactured commodi- ties fall. He makes this clear in replying to a recent communica- tion in which it was stated that \There must be a drop in prices before there is a drop in wages, and it seems that the farmer is the man who is going to be the first hit.\ This theory has been advanced by a number of manufacturers, said the secretary, who continued, \It is clearly an unjust conten- tion. It manifestly would not do to ask farmers to produce, buy- ing everything that they have to buy from manufacturers at high prices, with the assurance to them that their products will fall in price, and that then manufac- turers will consider what they will do with reference to their own prices. Oviously, manufac- turers must be willing to make at least a contemporaneous de- crease in their prices. It might even be contended that they should make a prior decrease in their prices, since the farmer's operations involve a year and he could not recoup for twelve months, or could not recoup at all, because, on the theory put forth, his products would fall in price. It seems to me that busi- ness men must be brought to real- ize that if we are to get back to the normal they must set about immediately to do their part, and unquestionably profiteering in manufactured products must be eliminated. \Of course, everything possi- ble will be done to enable the farmer to produce more economi- cally, so that if prices do fall he will not sustain a loss, or so great a loss. All the efforts of the de- partment of agriculture and of the land-grant colleges have this TI alL tr j ing to bring about better methods of cultiva- tion, better financing, beter mar- keting, the elimination of plant and animal diseases and insect pests, and the better utilization of labor. Much has been done in this direction and more will be done as time passes.\ Clubs Freely on Heads of MIII Employes.—U. S. Steel Corpora- tion's 145 Plants Affected New York, Sept. 22. — The usual calm prevailed yesterday at the Unit- ed States Steel corporation here. There was no indication of uneasiness over the fact that a strike designed to force suspension of operations in the company's 145 plants in 20 states will go into effect today. Both Elbert H. Gary, chairman of the board of direc- tors, and James H. Farrell, president of the corporation, spent the day at their country homes. Mr. Gary issued no statement of the company's plans for combatting the strike. Each sub- sidiary has been given permission to meet the situation as its officers see fit. The only general order which has been made public was the letter from Mr. Gary to the presidents of the sub- , idiary companies directing them not to yield on the principle of the open shop. It is pot probable any comment will he mate until the corporation learns what percentage of its 208,000 em- ployes responds to the strike call. These reports must come from plants In Pennsylvania, Ohio, New Jersey, Maryland, Massachusetts, Illinois. In- diana, Michigan, Washington, Connect- icut, Alabama, California, Missouri, Kentucky, Kansas, Wisconsin, Minne- sota, West Virginia. Delaware, New York, Colorado and Ontario. 50,000 to 90,000 at Chicago. Chicago, Sept. '2.2.—W hi le anion meetings were in progress yesterday all over the Chicago steel district with leaders making final appeals to the men to obey the strike call today, John Fitzpatrick, national chairman of the committee for organizing steel work- ers, in a statement, said the men were going to strike because E. H. Gary, head of the United States Steel cor- poration, had refused to treat with the union chiefs. He declared Mr. Gary had refused to listen to President Wil- son, who advised a conference. \The whole thing simmers down to the question, is E. H. Gary bigger than the chief of this country?\ said Mr. Fitzpatrick. Various estimates have predicted that between 50,000 and 90,000 men in the Chicago district, which includes the triangular area extending from Milwaukee on the north, to Joliet, Ill.. at the southwest. and Gary, Ind., on the east, would strike. Steel workers' officials have made public no esti- mates other than to say that canvasses in some plants have indicated that nearly 85 per cent of the men bad ex- pected to strike. Police Use Clubs. Pittsburg, Sept. 22—Clashes between Pennsylvania state police and crowds bent on holding labor mass meetings in the Pittsburg district yesterday usher- ed in the strike of the iron and steel industry. The most serious disturb- ance occurred at North Clairton. 20 miles from Pittsburg. late yesterday, where the state troopers charged a crowd of union men holding a mass meeting and broke it up. Resistance was offered and it is charged by union leaders that the mounted policemen used their clubs vigorously and in- jured a number in the crowd. About a dozen men were arrested. The meet- ing was broken up at the request of local authorities. According to eye witnesses, the meeting was proceeding quietly when the state police broke it up. The crowd scattered and some ran up a railroad embankment and threw rocks and other missiles at the troopers. .During the melee several of the crowd were struck on the head by the police, it was said, but so far as can he learned no one was seriously in- jured. It is alleged that several shot* were fired by someone in the crowd William Z. Foster, secretary of tie= national committee for organizing iron and steel workers said last night a vigorous protest would he lodged with the state government against what he termed a \murderous a ri at e ; np , -et law 1)conie. - Some of the blast furnaces of the Carnegie Steel company are located at Clairton. There was a slight disturbance at McKeesport. where union organizers attempted to hold a mass meeting in defiance of the notice by Mayor Geo. Lysle forbidding public gatherings, — - —The Auto Dray for hauling. kialisikilHIFINaten-ella************** Corn ! Cows !1— Cream! SEE US FOR Farm Loans Do it Now - SERVICE - Can be found in two places, the dictionary and 6 0 0 1 First State Bank OF WINIFRED Corn! Cows! Cream! I **11HIBle****SHIHOulteitHIHIHIHIHIHIHIHO-*******-autHleirateeuHluopEgeitewaogwe Don't \Pity\ Montana. What's to become of Montana? No snow in the mountains and consequently no water for irriga- tion. Rainfall away below normal; ranges devoid of feed and field crops burned up. Cattle and sheep shipped out by the thousand to areas where there are feed and water. It all makes a mighty gloomy picture when you put on blue spectacles and look at these con- ditions. Yes, what's to become of Mon - tan? And the answer is: Montana should worry; Montana is funda- mentally all right; Montana is going to be all right. Within ten years the Montana farmer who is discouraged and disappointed today will be crank- ing up the family flivver to go to town to buy a piano. The wealth is there in Montana in a soil so rich and productive that you can just about take a sack of it to a bank in Belgium and draw interest on it. The only thing that's the matter is that agriculture in Montana is about the newest thing they've got. From a strictly agricultural viewpoint Montana has not yet fully defined its resources, its ob- stacles to successful farming and the way to cope with them. It is so with every new agri- 5 . cultural area. Within the mem- ory of men who are only middle aged today agents from Kansas, from Nebraska, yes, from Min- nesota went through the older states of the Mississippi valley pleading for food and clothing for their drouth stricken, grass - honer ravaged communities. In comparison with the general wealth the cal Monta All the. to hang and stud , surely ft which presen ucing conditions in states of those days, y is on Easy street. t to do out there is stiff upper lips Kure. They'll ay to conditions unfavorable to s hot which are just exactly as much subject to conquest as conditions which oth- er states have overcome so com- pletely that they've forgotten about their troubles long ago. A Montana that keeps brave— and busy—is going to win out big because she has the goods. Don't waste any sympathy on Montana. —Minneapolis News. The Best Advertisement. The best advertisement any mer- chant can have is a satisfied customer. No greater tecomtuatidarAoa can be given an article than the following by E. B. NIIIburn, Prop., Guion Drm,; Store. (lhion, Ark. ' - We have sold Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for years and have always found that It, gives perfect satisfaction '. - IN IN THIEST—SArE- - ..Staffords.. To Our Customers: On and after September 15th we will sell for Cash Only. Those that have been in the habit of paying the first of every month we will still charge the account for that time. Others that have had regular pay day will pay on re- ceipt of goods. .Staffords..