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About The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.) 1909-1920 | View This Issue
The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.), 08 Aug. 1918, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053199/1918-08-08/ed-1/seq-5/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
THE STANFORD WORLD 4 ASTII51ADOR ANEUTS /aBLIEVIES 'HAY FEVER ASTHMA Begiis Treatment NOW All I/1 agglAts (1ua,autto Calf fiernies WHITE SCOURS BLACKLEC Your Veterinarian can stamp them out with Cutter's Anti -Calf Scour.Serum and Cutter's Germ Free Blackleg Filtrate and Aggressin, or Cutter's Blackleg Pills. Ask him about them. If he hasn't our literature, write to MS for information od these products. The Cutter Laboratory Berkeley, Cal., or Chicago, Ill. - TA. Laboratory TA.st KROU711 HOW' Kill All Flies! THEY SPREAD DISEASE Placed •ny where, Delay Fly K liter attract, and kills all Liles. Neat, clean, ornamental, convenient wad cheap. ettt,t\ ovikr, aot • wileg Daley Fly Killer libid by Ablabors. or a seat prop.d, 11.00. IMIOLD Ilektilti. tat/ On VW 555.. INIOOKLYN, N. V. WhyLose . Dnaldrelfusea!I Itching; The t r Remedy YOUT Haia __Etxa_glnkg;124nitAEL KER' ' HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparetinn of ',lent. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color sod Beauty toGray orFadod Hair bee. and $L00 at Drug g ist.. W. N. U., BILLINGS, NO. 32-1918. . Full, True and Particular. A girl was asked to parse \kiss ant this was her result: '\Titts. word is a noun, but it Is usually used as a conjunction. It is never declined end is more common than proper. It Is not very singular, In that it is usu- ally used in the plural. It agrees with me.\ Lives 200 Years! For more than 200 years, Haarlem Oil, the famous national remedy of Holland, . has been recognized as an infallible relief from all forms of kidney and bladder dis- orders. Its very age is proof that it meat have unusual merit. If you are troubled with pains or aches in the back, feel tired in the morning, headaches, indigestion, insomnia, painful or too frequent passage of urine, irritation or stone in the bladder, you will almost certainly find relief in GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules. This is the good old remedy that has stood the test for hundreds of years, prepared in the proper quantity ana convenient form to take. It is imported direct from Holland lab- oratories, and you can get it at any drug store. It is a standard, old-time home remedy and needs no introduction. Each capsule contains one dose of five drops and is pleasant and easy to take. They will quickly relieve those stiffened joints, that backache, rheuinatism, lum- bago, sciatica, gall atones, gravel, \brick dust,\ etc. Your money promptly refund- ed if they do not relieve you. But be sure to get the genuine GOLD MEDAL brand. In boxes, three sizes.-Adv. Clean Your Combs. Instead of washing eoliths, clean them by brushing and 1 , 11111 hg a piece of cotton through the teeth, always changing it es It gets soiled, then rub with a clean cloth. WHO IS TO Women as well as men are made miserable by kidney and bladder trou- ble. Thousands recom- BLA ME mend' Dr. Kilmer' r Swamp -Root, the great kidney medicine. At druggists in large and medium size bottles. You may re- ceiVe a sample size by Parcel Post, also pamphlet telling about It. Address Dr. Kilmer er Co.. Binghamton, N. Y.; an enclose ten cents, also mention this paper, Extreme View. \Ella is getting deft about this san- itary pure food business,\ \Yes; she won't even listen to a fellow's chaff unless it is pure non- sense.\ Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of OASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 ears. Children Cry, for Fletcher's Castoria 14444 That Is If He Isn't a Scout. \What does a person usually grow In his garden?\ \Tired.\ -Boys' Life. RED CR088 STORY. Red Cross Ball Blue and what it will do seems like an old story, but it's true. Red Cross Ball Blue is all blue. No adulteration. Makes clothes whiter than snow. Use It next washday, All good grocers sell It.-Adv. Paradoxical Raise. \1 see where the price of shaves has gone up.\ \Queer in a business where there are so ninny cuts.\ Exactly So. Nell -Ile told me Ile would go to the end of the world to serve me. Belle -Well, that's going the limit. When Your Eves Need Care Try Murine Eve Remedy No Holm -Ong -Jusi lire Gornfort. MIAs all PrOgalSte or well. Wale tur Free We aoolc,, atuutrat 1.:1ek: REMEDY CO.,011 1 ICAO() • IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAYSMOOL LESSON (By REV. P. R. FITZWATER, It. D Teacher of English Bible in the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago./ (Copyright, 1918, Western Newspaper Union.) LESSON FOR AUGUST 11 HELPING-OTHERS. LESSON TEXTS -Luke 10:25-37; Gala- tians 6:1-10. GOLDEN TEXT -Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ. - Galatians 6:2. PUVOTIONAL READING -Galatians 6: 25-6:10. PM/AWRY LESSON MATERIAL -Luke 10:25-27. INTERMEDIATE, SENIOR AND ADULT TOPIC -Who needs our help, and how can we best give it? ADDITIONAL MATERIAL - Proverbs 17:17; Matthew 5:42; Romans 12:10-16; I Corinthians 13:1-13; I John 3:16-18. I. Being a Neighbor (Luke 10:30- 87). The story of the Good Samaritan is Christ's answer to the lawyer's ques- tion: Who is our neighbor? He shifts the question so as to show that the supreme concern is not who Is our neighbor, but whose neighbor am I? If I am Christ's, my supreme concern will be to find those who have need that I may be a neighbor to them. If we love God supremely, we shall find all along life's highway souls who have been wounded and robbed by sin, whom we can love as ourselves. To be a neighbor is to- t See those about us who need help (v. 33). Love is keen to discern need. Let us be on the lookout for those in need of our help. 2. Have compassion on the needy (v. 83). Christ's plty was aroused as became into contact with those who were suf- fering and in need. All those. who have his nature will be likewise move. 3. Go to those In need (v. 34)• Many are willing to give money to help the poor and needy, but are un- willing to personally minister to them. Many times the personal touch is more Important than the material aid. We should give ourselves as well as our money. 4. Bind up the wounds (v. 34). Many indeed are the wounds today which need our attention. 5. Set the helplegs ones on our beasts while we walk (v. 34). This is a proof that the love Is genu- ine. Christians will deny themselves in order to have something to give to those who have need. Thls kind of sympathy is greatly needed today. 6. Bring to the Inn and take care of the unfortunate (v. 34). Genuine love does not leave its serv- ice Incomplete. Much Christian serv- ice is spasmodic; helps once and then leaves a man to care for himself. - 7. Gives money (v. 35). It costs a good deal to he a neigh- bor. Love is the most expenalve thing In the world. It cost God his only Son; It cost Christ his life. May we go and do likewise! II. Living and Walking In the Spir- it (Galatians 6:1-10). Those who are freely justified in Christ will conduct themselves as fol- lows: 1. Restore the sinning brother (v. 1). Restore is a' surgical term which means the placing back of a dislocat- ed member to its place. We are mem- bers of the body of Christ. and the sinning of a brother ought to as really' give us pain as the dislocation of a member of our body. This service is to be done In the spirit of meekness, lest we also be tempted. 2. Bear one another's burdens (vv• 2-4). Many are the burdens of life, bur- dens of weakness, temptation, sorrow, suffering nod sin. Christ is the su- preme burden -bearer. When we do this we - fulflli the law of Christ. 3. Bear our own burdens (v. 5). There are peculiar burdens incum- bent upon each one to hear. These burdens cannot be borne by others. 4. Support teachers of God's Word (vv. 6-8). It is incumbent upon those who are taught in the Word of God to give of their means for - the support of the teacher. To repudiate this obligation is mockery of God, for he ordained that they who preach the Gospel should live of the Gospel (1 Cor. 9:14). 5. Be earnest in well-doing (v. 9). Some fail of the reward because they give up when the goal is about to be reached. 6. Work for the good of all men (v. 10). The one who is free in Christ will have sympathies and interests as wide as the race. He will especially strive to help those Who are members of Christ's body. True Service. There is no service like his that serves because be loves -Sir thine Sidney. Vsunteth Not Itself. Put a seal upon your lips, and for. get what you have done. After you have been kind, after Leye has stolen forth into the world filni done its beautiful work, go back into the ehnde again, and say nothing, about it. , • A Paradox. It is one of the happy paradoxes of spirit that without dependence thetle can be no independence, and that pre- cisely in proportion to our faith will be our intellectual and moral activity. --Susan E. Blow. EFFICIENT OPERATION OF FARM MACHINES WILL SAVE MUCH WAIN FOR HUMAN FOOD Proper y Adjusted and Operated Tractor Outfits Will Eliminate Waste. (Prepared by the United States Depart' meat of Agriculture.) The most essential thing in setting separator for thrashing Is to get it level. Here again the thrashermen thould not guess, but should have a good spirit ;evel and use it at every telling. To do Its best work the ma - hill(' must be as nearly level us pos. Oble from side to side, and it is gen- erally conceded best to have It level rengthwise, although a few Inches dif- ference in level between the front and rear ends is not likely to be detri- mental. if the machine Is set on :oft ground, one or two of the wheels nay sink further into the ground than the others after it has been standing tor n short time, find the operator should not forget to watch this point. A very slight difference In level be- tween the two sides of the separator will make the shafts all run against the bearings on the lower side and have a tendency to cause them to heat. It will also CaUSP tile groin constantly to work toward the low side of the sep- arator and make it more difficult for the cleaning inoehuarii suii to do good work. Even if the machine Is set on a barn floor, it should be leveled care- fully, for harnioors are rarely pre - :essay level, and the weight of a sepa- rator may milk( It sag in weak places. The main drive belt should hang loosely over the pulleys, with just enough tension to keep It running smoothly. If it is ton tight, it will have a tendency to pull the separator mt of place and will put unnecessary strain on the cylinder shaft and box - Ines and possibly 'mike them heat or pull the cylinder out of line so that the teeth will not run true. When thrashing In the open, It is well to pay attention to the direction if the wind, if there Is any choice n the direction in which the machine is to be set. It Is much more pleasant for the men working at the machine if It can be set so that the wind blows the dust and chaff away from than). If a steam engine is used, the setting ihould be such also that sparks will he carried away from the separator Ind straw stack. The separato- should always he blocked solidly to prevent vibration as much as possible, and to prevent the belt from pulling the machine for- ward. It will frequently save sonic 'Ime If blocks of the right size and Mnpe for this purpose are selected or lrepared before the thrashing starts rod carried with the machine from Mace to place. Wornout or -broken plowshares make excellent blocks. Cylinder and Concaves. The problem of adjusting the cylin- ler and coneaves is to get them pitted in proper relation to each other, with the right number and arrangement of ((heti in the concnves for the grain :hat is being threshed. The adjust- nent should he such as thoroughly to loosen all the grain from the heads without (Tacking or breaking up the straw into such fine pieces that sepa- ration will he lifficult. It to essential that the cylinder and C011eareS he adjusted SO that each tooth Is at all times equally distant from the two between which it Is pass- ing, and that the concaves he .kept close enough to the cylinder that 'In- tim/040'd heads cannot get through. The first thing In adjusting the cylin- der is to RP(' that the shal4 is alloys] properly, that is, that eritii'e end is net further forward than the other. There 'R a constant tendency for the end of the shaft to which the main drive pulley Is attached to pull forward, and at the same time force the other end hack. The next step is to take up any superfluous end play. Some pro- rision for regulating end play Is found in all machines. The space that must he left to prevent friction on the end ff the shaft anti consequent heating Is from one thirty-second to one , sixty- fourth of an inch, or just enough to allow the shaft to run freely. Any more play than IR absolntely necessary should not be tolerated, as It allows the cylinder teeth to get close to the concave teeth on one side and corre- tpondinOy far away on the other. The listance between the cylinder and con- cave teeth when properly adjusted is generally not much over an eighth of an inch. It is easily seen that a very little end play will cause cracking of the grain ,on the one side anti allow nnthrnshed heads to pass through on the other. For the same reason it is important that all teeth In both the .7y1Inder and concaves he kept straight. There should, always, be wrenches In the tool box for straight - lag any which get out of line. Self -Feeders. A large majority of pie thrashing machines of the country are now equipped with self -feeders. It Is It mistake, however, te assume that be- cause the feeding is done mechan- ically the feeder will always deliver the utithrashed grain to the cylinder in the proper manner when the bun- dles are pitched on promiscuously and at irregular intervals. 'Cho governor V hi) ('it controls the feeder should be adjusted so thet it will stop feeding as quickly as possible when the speed is reduced below normal. By lull means it should he adjusted to net more quickly than the governor on the engine. If a reduction in the speed of the cylinder does not stop the feeder liefore the engine governor acts. the speed trill pick up again and the bun- dles will continue to move into the ma- chine without giving the separator time to clear itself of the overload which originally reduced the speed. The bundles shined he pitched on One ut n time, with tile heads toward the machine, and the distances be- tweln) bundles should be as nearly Ind, rerun as possible. In bundle -thrashing, the center, or dividing board, should nearly always be used to keep the itundiee from piling up into the center of the carrier. If one man on each side of the machine cannot pitch bun- dles in the proper nianne - r fast enough to keep the machine supplied, It will usually be better to supply extra piteli- ers then to have the two men piteli two or more bundles lit a time with- out any regard to the way they fall in the conveyor. It is herd work to keep the bundles going IMO the mii- chine In n steady strewn, with the beads all pointing In the right direr - Don, but unless this is done it Is im- possible for the innehine to do its best work. There is sometimes a tendency to crowd a machine to the limit and keep It overloaded most of the time. This Is especially true of large custom ma- chines. While both the operator of s l ut a machine and the owners of the grain to he thrashed naturally are de- sirous of finishing each Joh quickly, the nttetnpt to get as mini: grain /IS possIble into the matellitte, combined with snore or less irregular feediug which is almost pure to accompany It, will certainly result in a conelderable waste of grain. The value of grain thus wasted rney easily more than off- set any saving in time effected by speeding up the operation of the nut - chine beyond Its normal cap/Jetty. Cleaning the Grain. The adjustment of the cleaning mechanism anti the proper direction of the blast from the fan to separate the graln sidisfnetorily from the chaff calls for more skill on the part of the operator than atiything else In connection with the operation of a thrashing machine. One of the main duties of the man In charge of the sep- arator Is to see that the grain is as nearly free as possible from chaff and weed siVrIsr before It Is delivered from the machine. At the same time he must see that the amount which goes back in the tailings elevator to be retitrashed Is kept IOW and that the loss occasioned by grain being carried out of the machine and into the stack Is eliniinnted as nearly as possible. The condition of the grain and the construction of different innkes of maehines are so variable that it is Impossible to give any deft - rate rules In all cases. However, an operator who knows the function of each part of the cleaning mill : how to make all adjustments. mid does every- thing possible to meintaln the proper speed, should hove no great dillienity in saving practically all the groin and „ cleaning It well at the same time, if he will examine the nuiebine frequent. ly to see just how much sniff each part of the cleaning meehlinfsm Is handling and the amount find char- acter of the tailings. The queenly of tailings should he small and they should contain very little plump grain and light chaff. Probably more grain is wasted from failure to clean up at the end of a setting than from any other single cause. Just as much care should be taken In cleaning up ell the unthrnali- ed straw and loose grain that has ac- cumulated around tlw machine as Is taken with the rest of the job. Even with the best of care a considerable amount of unthrashed strew will ac - emulate around the feeder In the course of a day's work. If the straw Is very dry, considerable grain will shatter tram the heads as It is being pitched front the wagons or stacks onto the feeder. Small piles of chaff and straw which contain a certain amount of grain will accumulate nt various other places around the ma- chine, and the machine should not be stopped at the end of the job untll nIl of this is pitched Into the cylinder and carefully rethrashed. Of course the careless thresherrunn or farmer may say that the chickens or pits will clean up whatever is left In Bile manner, hut practically it is a total loss, and any machine which Is operated carelessly In this respect wastes; a large amount of grain In a single season. 111121111111111111111,11111111111111111111111111111111111111V1111111111O111111111111111101111XII Temptink, veal loaf W HAT is more tempting for a summer luncheon than Libty's savory Veal Loaf! Prettily garnished it makes a dainty yet sub- stantial dish and one all ready to put on the table! Order Libby'sVeal Loaf today. You will want it always on your shelves -for quick lunch- eons - for unexpected guests. Ubby, MNeill & Libby, Chicago musummummilimonommitesminumlimmommumil He iR Save the up Canadian Harvest When Our Own Harvest Requirements Are Completed United States Help Badly Needed Harvest Hands Wanted Military demands from a limited population have made such a scarcity of farm help in Canada that the appeal of the Canadian Government to the United States Government for Help to Harvest the Canadian Grain Crop of 1918 Meets with a request for all available assistance to GO FORWARD AS SOON AS OUR OWN CROP IS SECURED The Allied Armies must be fed and therefore it is necessary to save every bit of the crop of the Continent -American and Canadian. Those who respond to this appeal will get a Warns Welcome, Good Wages, Good Board and Find Comfortable Bosses A card entitling the holder to a rate of one cent per mile from Canadian boundary points to destination and return will be given to all harvest applicants. Every facility will be afforded for admission into Canada and return to the United States. Information as to wages, railway rates and routes may be had from the UNITSD STATES EMPLOYMENT SERVICE BUTTE; BILLINGS; GREAT FALLS; HAVRE; HELENA; KALISPE.LL; MISSOULA; LEWISTON. Short and Pointed Message. Few women hove liven so ho rd worked relive the war- IllS Afrs. Bram- well Booth, wife of the Salvatioe Army chief, But in her scant leisure Mrs. Bramwell Moth can tell a good s t or,;'. ine of them concerns a certain drunk- ard iii, fell Into the hands of the Army. \Ile had been drunk for so long,\ said Mrs. Bramwell Booth. \that lie was nide to give Ilt4 very little infor- mation about himself. L5entunily, however, we discovered that he was married and that Ills ili , orleit wife lived In a town in the 'Midlands. NVe, immediately telegraphed to her: have found your husband.' in a very short time we got tho reply : YiIi I'll ii keels \ Inducements. rs. IMbwalle mid Mrs. Twolible seem to be on friendly terms. \Yes Indeed. They've been that way for it ielleher (If years.\ 'How de you nceount for the feet they never fall out, its most women do, swifter or Inter?' \ \Veil, their husbands' itiennies are (dent ; hot li ars. gO011 10111{Illg ; they hove ninee the snme amount of money to spend for clothes, luxuries and mill there are neither children nor peielles II, stir III) strife. III feet they'd Inure a hard time finding something te squabble abont.\-/Iirminglinin It's ens)' for women to keep secrets that are not interesting. Some people seem to think that loud talk ninkes a sound argument. G 'Ill im1IY n --'1't, ° t a t h il l ' 0 VsiuI k IIONV 11 ha/ beeotoes 11111,' Imya who tell tilts? 11'1111e ill l,rotv (nge41 lit''') Oil,that Is an olalopol nattier with the boys' parents. SOIlle lire foolishly threat- ened wills (\lei mil diminution ; corporfil pimislimmit Is Inflicted (III 50111f. ; oth- ers tire hicarcernteil I or short ',climbs of time in eellers, shed , and closets or are humiliated by helm; put prema- turely to biol. tH hero e subjected to II course of light meniai gytimastica containing Ii smattitriug child psychol- ogy, psychowilliy, psychimainry, often - Hume %wit an (dement h,t filectryo- mancy or drietyllomaney. After all, the questIon is one of a belief in or against II lierS011111 M.O. Personally, 1- (11W the good old holy was gasping for breath.) Queered Himself Right There. She Was (111/011I to merry MI'. MtillPy- ha as, flat' It Nita II (.11Stl AillY 11Ild December. A tents' was given to cete- hrate the engsgement, and one of ths guests was requested by the hostess to sing. \Yes do, Mr. Sweetnote.\ remarked the prospective' bride. \Do you hap. pen to remember 'My Sweetheart When a Boy?'\ \(treat Scot !\ exclaimed the voenlist \Remember htm! You must take Ins, for n centenarian!\ Ile Was not invited to the wedding:. Luke pica Flour. Willie --What's a substitute, dad?' Crenshaw -Anything that costs more than the real article. -Life. o This After You Eat Hot Weather \Out of Fix\ Stomachs Easily Put Right When hot weather comes, stomach and bowel miseries begin. Strong, sound atomachs as well as weak ones are easily affected by the harmful gases and acids so often produced in the things we eat and drink during hot weather. Winter -Nature's ice- box, is gone -hot weather breeds the poisonous germs that cause pto- maine poison In ail its many forms. Every one knows that the after -eat- ing nausea, belching, that wretched, bloated, \lumpy\ feeling, sour stom- ach, heartburn, food repeating, and other forms of indigestion and dye - pepsin are far more frequent during hot weather. It is the time when you have to guard constantly against an upset stomach and the many ills that are always apt to follow. Then again -we have the world's war to win - with the change of diet and extra work which means we must all care- fully guard our stomachs this year - keep ourselves fit and fine. A tnertelona relief and prevention has been found for stomach sufferers, which makes it possible for you to eat the things you like beet without a single unpleasant thought of what may follow. EATONIC 'Tablets, good tasting, quick acting, dnd absolutely harmless, have already proven an un- told blessing to thousands of people. Ono or two EATONIC Tablets after meals work wonders. They sweeten and purify the stomach by neutraliz- ing the trouble -making acids and gases and stop the griping pains of indiges- tion and other stomach and bowel disturbances. And the best part of it 18 -you can be your own judge. JUst try EA 1'0Ni°. Let your own stomach tell you the truth. If you are not pleased then they don't cost you one penny. Druggists are amazed at the aston- ishing reports from EATONIO users. who have found EATONIC a quick, , wonderful relief for stomach ailments. So we tell you to get a large box of EATONIO from your druggist, whom You know and can trust, and then it FATONIO is not 'tutted to your case. return It to your druggist at once sad geb bsek your money. That's Ii lair, aware ofter. Ere!? person in urged to make the test. Let your own stomach tell you the truth. So start using EATONIO today. •