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About The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.) 1909-1920 | View This Issue
The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.), 15 Jan. 1920, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053199/1920-01-15/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
II \YOUR FATHER'S DEAD.\ s ME STANFORD WORLD lierk's loss until I put in here yester- day and heard there was a survivor from her on the other side of the Synopsis—Stacey Vt'I1lh. ,, . firPi island—but I knew ahmtt you fast male of the hark Upoln LI, Java sea, is the sole paiv:efl, shot a l4101 ft, rest less the crew, all I • r r• • I • •1. ft ... Ver. Ting Wah. glance at NVallen. Illen began to paeti. last man to di. 1-'1- \\ r three Stens one way, three steps the and lite other 1'1,, .11' I up end deem the narrnw ealan, aboard \lnHH. 1 1 1 .,,. • toi ious I r •- ••, '1 .. I r . ti \li it it iii:In!\ he said abruptly. hill Idei • l dli. rye gol 1)1141 11e115 for you. Vitae incident of , ,11100,1 faitier'S tleiiii!\ SeeMS .tt - i the confes sion. \ th ti'allen rt, For it III 0111 Wall en neither ters In the ship's hg the fa , t ••• moved nor spoke. It Ives Illllt'ttit in his death anti alnunions the vessel Zrasp the hill all:1011.10We of tit,' in a small holt Walletts I words. I his faiher--dead drifts to the island of Arrn and Seintish trader there, MacKWght. ' Whin t did this thin -faced man, With 1.ares for hint. Learning that a ship the little black eyes that tilways ro- ta In port on the other tilde of the island, twenty mites away. Wailer). fused to meet one's own, who wits though unfit for the task, starts tramping nervonsly now up it lb/Wit to reach it, but falls exhausted on ch bun on a rusty t ramp the trail. There he is found by a, steamer here in the .111V/I Sea, lit the man and woman who are from the ship It was trying to reach. Mott. other end of the world, hnow of his first mate, and Helen MacKay, a father, %situ never left the four walls passenger. They convey him to the of that lonely gray stone house in ('iii - vessel. The ship proves to he a small tramp steamer, the Monielgir ifiirtint? Capt. Laynton. tin vu itt know Weed my fa- ther?\—Ite found himself speaking in quiet voice. CHAPTER III --Continued. Captain Layntnri stopped impul- --4-- sively in front tif his table, pulled the If was a little strange. Ships like drawer open, took out a sheet of pa - the Monleigh weren't in the habit of per and handed it to NVallen. helelgIng in expensive luxuries of \you'll get the drift of this your - that description! Ilk brows gathered self. I guess.\ eveentured. ,for ; anti then, with a shrug AValleti stared et the paper, at first of his shoulders, ht. walked forward with curious bewilderment—and then. to tile cabin under ltiO, with the Midden flash of cumprolien- bridge and knoeked. I sloth he was on his feet. It was it list \Come in!\ linwled a voice gruffly. I of the perts of call seitieluied for the NVallen entered to face the little Ill-fated l'polo en her lust voyage— titan with the thin ftice and queer i ports of Call that she lied never made. eyes --he promptly modified \queer\ \wi n o does this [noun?\ he de- ep \evesive\ now—that he recognized mantled In n 1419' voice. \How did you us the captain. . 4 . 0111P by this?\ \Dello!\ exclaimed the captain in \Yeur father gave 11 to me,\ the Suddenly altered tones. \If it ain't I eall i a t a \A w l now , if y ou 'll Mr. Woll'ol! And on your ill just listen fltr ii unitinte. I'll give ready! Well, I'll be ! Pod sit you the whole story, and ymell see (101 . 11 t Sit (1 \wo!\ lit' 'ollv\(1 W,ittieui for yoorself. lOst I might as well to a seat on the tot-hert though. f ia t I own ship. \These. Are Your Father's Paper16. 0 forward the bottle mei glass that were \veil. I11.115 tip to you, )t r. 'Witileit. There's still en the table. \Sit down, Mr. NS'allen, understand—when your either came say, a nin tter of I wo months before Intl help yourself!\ aboard one evening find offered to flint charter expires. and the Mote silook las Iwo\' its lie 8e1 \ Pi l eharter nie for a three months' erilise leigh's yours tilt II it does --in your himself. down here. Ile made the price right. f, titer's phiee. That's square, isn't It \Thanks just the same,\ he said; paid the fffff ley down in advance, 111111 IV:1114'1i ileSitafed \tut I'm still sticking lit I closed with film . lin the fare of it It was troth square \Quinine eh?\ repented the °ti te r., \ li p gut v e me th e list of ports, and and lerrierable. Ile began to wonder \Yes. of course! Yes --right y1111 are! • said his situ was on a trading berk if lie Mid misjudged the man. ‘Vt.11\—Ite poured a glass for him- called the rpolo, and fliat be %vented And yet, Ins;inctively, in spite of golf—\here's tui you, end just as hearty -- ro get tr a ,k • if him as soon as h.,. that,' there seellii something specious If I drink alone. And I'll :44141. Mr. sible, tind offered an extra litmus for I'Ven In the heliesly that appeared to Walter', that it's to the rummest all hotels if we made a quick 11th of underlie the other's motives. Ile had rneelltur, that (IVII1' 1%1\ 1:1110WIll iti nly it. Titers 1111 I know about the reit- reason enough tut distrust every soul Wei\ ' sou for the cruise. Well, to cut It litlig on hoard a shlp where he wits moritliy 'Millen watched the man's neat ' story short. we ;touted away. lind eel - 1:1111 his II/111 heell murdereil! posel of four fingers, leamel back on were doon just south of the line whim Too mentlts—if aeeepted the rep- tile locker, swept his eyes around the , the n4'4'1.1 , 411 !alit's offer. If he hail only something \Ymir father Nttts alone 110W11 In his to work on! cabin. We lward a shot, rushed ho- 8,,m o thing: y(.c, he had something, I/111, and, thinking It strange that he Drink -Molise Sem of Singapore! didn't show in the exeltelnent. called to Ilitn—but got no enswer. Wc11. we burst in hls cable door and . found him doail across the bunk.\ \You mean,\ through Captain Lily loon i'uiIiIt \I here!\ he sied hurt teues. eliet imike ynd any fairer proposition than that. I iii I?\ \No - said Wallin instantly, his mind made up. “And I'll :ie. erit offer, ittiplaitt, and think you heartily for it.\ \Good!\ returned 1.1iyitton prompt- ly. \Welt with that settled, What's, the an orders? 11*.eve got slean , tip tind can get away tiny minute you say the worth\ 'Then by ali Immo: get away at ()nee!\ he litugh...1 easily. \Aryl\ — he liesitated—\let's see: I guess you'd better shape up for Singapore. Yes. call it Singapore for a starter.\ \Right !\ anseered Laynton. ''Sing- apore it is: But here-- Wait a mile course.\ ute, Mr. Wallen.\ Wallet] turned his hack and stared Ill. hurried to a small iron safe that out of one of the forward portholes 1111-I bath in under Ills hunk, opened down oil - to the dirty foredeek. Was it, rind returned with a bulky manila the man by W/14 he telling the envelope, which he handed to) NVellett. truth'? That his father had chnrtered - These are yullr popers,\ \Captain Laynton—Mark Laynton.\ he t Monle1gh Emil stilled with he her— explained. \I collect...I thm e to. yes. ember and put them away for safe - reign. and, suddenly looking tip at the But that his death was nceidentel— keeping.\ captain ugalti, Intercepted a furtive the background of his father's life— \Thank you,\ said Wallet) eravely, glance that the other was stealing at the recent attempt umm his CIWIl life! ile stepped out onto the ileek. film over the rim of his glass. his brein was wqrking in flashes. This ily the It It ) 1 t ellptain,\ 111.- ohsessiefl ins - \That ever I've knoWn,\ said the cap- man Laynton repelled hit a, I ually. \I none!. you carry %tireless.\ tain hastily as his eyes dropped.f An accident—never! There was an i The enptithes whistle, pulled front here' Ii be a lot to say to each other, room ,fnr cirmbt—\never go to the his lateket, chirped shrilly. Mr. Wallet].\ Eller -Lit W11S not en accident—his fn. \Yoe there, for'iiril :\ bawled In \yes Walton naeed. \I'll confess' ther had been murdered on This ship n sell Ville,. that lvae 1;10. !he bell,,w of rat puzzled on sei,eral points, Cep- And then suddenly he SWallOW , \1 it 1.1.1 1 1. \Z - it and liv lit eetgli am -nor, tttin—Laynton, eta I it? I'm not slire linrd. Mr. Mott Hey. .N1r. Mull u\ caught the name correctly 'when It was to save Wm that his father Atel OS the second linker emerged Miss MacKay Introduced us, find chartered the Mouleigh and ctinie from the chartroom, just abaft the \That's right,\ alt iii th tu other. •Enst; for, according to that ilst of bridge rind directly liver the captain's Idtlyfittirt. Captain Lnynton—rtiark port e, it Is fa her somehtev hail iwen eithin: \We'll get 1111411iV Ntity at 011ee, Idlynton.\ In touch with his movements, mune 1,01 me know e hen she's up und \Well. Captain 11nynton,\ said NN'al- how had knoe it the choicer he %%MS in, down.\ tieing a rem one only leaves inc a dered himself. len, \roar reference to our meeting an d, i r yi ag i n avert it, heti been t u ur- l , yoti le sa t i li t i r ? net t l,li to ye Nal s V ;i l t e ,s ti. tutu hthasted Ilft11- More up in the air. I can un- A cold, inerrileest paselon swept upon row American litw--cuiet trade in derstend, of course, that you might !dm. Someone en this Shill Was the American ports without' It now, you have heard of the Upoio being miss- murderer. Was It this man here? know.\ ing-,-Or reported lost; but I can't un- What wits at the boloin of it all? derstand how you knew I was on It was a Inng arm of vengeatwe that lier--or, knowing that, what interest reached to that gray stone house In Helen Mackay tells about you could have in tne.\ California, thut reached to Singapore, Captain Laynton laughed a little to this ship, to that sweltering, plague- herself to the hero. In a constrained way. ' stricken hark where, strangely didiet know anything about the enough, he alone had lived! tight lips, \that lie committed sui- cide?\ \No. Wail!\ Captain Laynton ShOOk Ills Ilead. \It wasn't thee tied knows how it happened! The thing Went off—thers all. Ile Walt Cleaning one of those [intent automatic pistols. \There 911S a bottle' of oil, a clean- ing rag, and a wire ...webbing brush on tlw their. And\--Lityntiat petrol himself another giass ( from the hut the. gulped It down, and lelped his 11ps with the back of his hand—\well lilt trying to give it to you In a few !Wiled hiln at SCR of (TO UK CONTLiNtIt.D.1 And now the score was a very !leery one to pay --his father's life! Well— Ida eyes narrowed—he would pay It! \fed my father bring a native sere 'int with him—a man mimed Gunge'!' hp asked dispassionately. \No the other replied. \He was \v o le , nodded. \wh et e l se I s t h ere to tell ine't\ \Not tilueli—bilt tYllat ymt cat\ guess,\ Layntini suit!. \I ran down through the Makassar strait and tinule for the nearest port 1111 that list—l'obi here. Your father had paid ine for the three months, and If I say it nip self, when I make a bargain I stick to it. If I could find you Inside the three months I was going to do It. \I don't know what your father was so anxious aliout, theugh I under- stood. of course. that lie chartered me because out here, with Volt touching at those trading he entildn't reach you by mail or oable; hut I made sure It was SI Imeilling might y important 91111 I thought you'd know what It \yes.\ It wits alleoet 11111 interrogation. put neurally. for a (rave of eagerness in toeies !hat Was 11141 entirely disguised. luiven't lite slightest idled,\ sitid stwoolbly. \Intl haveh'i?\ tat ylittill's eyes for /1114.4. !iced “Well, that's Prepared by the United States Depart. queer! A man (beet t4) the ox of Prepared a Shin like tills ment of Agilculture I woiaam at ia .,, (ty gita o Itinek lorust---known also as \yel- low\ Itletist —is mi. hit' most profit- \! flare sits' my hither knew,\ site'- g- gest eli ‘Vallell fillietly. Then briskly: ;11.1e and nseful kinds or thither for the imam The wood Is henvy, hard. and \The question now is: 1VItitt are you going tut do, captain'!\ pariirolarly durable vvIten used in the et1'hy?\ said Captain Litynton, \1 For use as fence postS, blnek th,, ag h t 1. ( 1 laa d o that plain enou g h . is hing-lived and very desirable. 11 hen 1 intike at centract I keep it. It's 011 y tine other 50041 gives longer mere- ' ice, natiwiy, osage orange or \bois Black Locust Utilizing Rocky Places on Farm Are Indications of Good Farm Management. Ware,\ wnich, however. nowhere oc- curs in abundance met Is so hard that It is difficult to drive stupies into it ex- cept when It 18 green. Locust Grows Rapidly. Med: lecust grows rapidly and yields peel -sized fence posts at an age at from fourteen to tnenty years, ac- cording to tile fore,st service. A worn - [BLACK LOCUST RECOMMENDED FOR WOODLOT I Back Locust Plantation, Trees Five Years Old, out field In middle Tennessee whleh. 20 years preVitillitly, had been el:lilted wit It one -year -old locust seedlings, yielded fence posts worth $188 an olt Ille St1111114, 01' $4S0 at the railroad about two miles distlint. This 9118 9 gross return of Si).40 an acre yearly on it ItIllsiti&of fairly good soil which be- fore the trees vere set out hail sterted to gully badly. Returns of $5 to $7 an acre annually have frequently been realized Ott 11001', thin Wiliam!. flood soils underlaid with Iii6estotie end planted to black locust lit the Appalte chief' and Piedmont regions, front Pennsylvania to Kentucky an° Tennes- see, elm he counted on to yield an av- erage of $10 an acre yearly at the end of front 15 to 20 years. The manufacture of Insulator pins requires large amounts of black lectist, for \Welt purpose it is the most eat's- factory tvood. Starting Black Locust. In starting black lerust, small sprouts with a pnrtlon of the root may be 111114 1111 and used; or, better, the seed 'tiny he sown In the sprineh drills in good soll, like onion seed. At the end of the, settson the seedlings will be from two to four feet In height and eatisfactory . In size for setting out. This may he done in the late fall. but the mitring season. about the time growth starts, Is preferable. In some regions the locust wood borer Is al- most eertain to en use extellalve dam- age to young plantations unless special precautions are titken to . keep the trees lit tt henithy growing condition and the hark shaded by foliage, either from near -by trees, shrubs, or weeds. Information 4111 this insert and methods of its control will be found in United States Department of Agriculture Ittil• tell') 787, \Protection From the 1.0eU141 Borer.\ Strange its it may appear, black locust, although one of the most dite able woods when set In the ground matures early and deterinretes in the tree repidly If not cut ellen ripe. Citm- ntercially the tree Is usually mature in 15 to 25 years. GOOD TOP DRESS FOR WHEAT Application of as Little as Two Tons of P.lanure Per Acre May Increase Yield Ten Bushels. It pays a big protit to top dress the wheat with In:111111e. All 11111111111liiill of its little its two lens per acre may Increase the yield ten bushels; lit least it het; done this much one year with another in lielianti tests. Four tons melte imiv about twn bushels more. The immure behefits the Wheat ill- rectI through the plantfood which it contents. end through the winter protection, moot Often is tif great 'r value. Where manure Is used as a top dressing the stend of cheer is generelly better. There is an or- ganic benefit from the manure which Is considerable until Is not so easily ex- plained. Where as much or more plant. food Is at in the form of com- mercial fertilizers the resulting yield has not beet) as large, CUT STRAW IS BEST BEDDING Much of Liquid Manure, Now Wasted, Can Be Saved by Use of Ef- fect ye Absorbents. A great deal of the liquid manure now going to waste can he saved by the use of nhsorbents, such us straw, sawdust. muck and loam. Uncut straw is a very valuable absorhent, totting up two or three times Its weight of water. while flue cut straw will ab- sorb six or nine times Its weight of Mi,reover. oats straw contarhs quite a leree ninount of plantfood, es- pecially potash. BUYING SMALL FARM TOOLS Time and Money Can Be Saved by Making Purchase on One Order— Give Systematic Care. (Prepared by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture If possible all slim!i tools for the farm should he purchnsed on one or- der. This will save time and, usually, money. Also, It will entail a ,totn1 ex- penditure sufficiently Mtge to impress he (firmer with the Importance of IvInv systematic care to his small no's. FEEDING HAY AND ROUGHAGE Handling and Hauling of Large Bulk May Be Saved by Giving Products to Live Stock. (Prepared by the United States Depart. meat of Agrieulttire.) In the marketing of hay and rough- age there is a large bulk to hatelle unit lune to the point of delively. The United States department of apicul- ture points out that this means mitelt extra .111bor for the nem alili te/1195 4 on grain mid crop fitrins. and much taken off Whieli might he re- turned to the fields if the products were fed to live stock. HOW WHEAT IS DISPOSED OF One -Half of Crop of 1918 Sold by Farmers In Three Months Be. ginning With July. (Prepared by the Untied States Depart- ment ac Agriculture.) Wheat is mostly marketed by farm- ers soon, or, at any rate, not long. after the Ilan est. Of the crop of 1918, more than one-half (vas sold by farm- ers in the three months beginning with July, and 69.3 , perseent in four months. Thereafter the monthly sales dwindled to 1.5 per cent of the year's total In June, 1910. NICE INCOMES FROM POULTRY Raising Chickens Has Many Attrac- tions for Those Who Enjoy Agee - cation With Fowls. , Poultry raising, like raising live mock In general, has ninny attractions for those who enjoy the work. Men and aOuiteti atm) enjoy association with rtnImels tied fowls., There are women making nice Incomes from poultry. KILL GOPHERS IN ORCHARDS Rodents Delve Deep at This Time of Year and Sometimes Nest Under Cherry Trees. Look mil for gophers and get them now. In well -drained orebards they delve deep and nest under the root - crown of your heat cherry -tree without giving much evidence of its 61 Pneumonia often follows a Neglected Cold KILL f THE COLD: CASCARA QUININ \ IL /Morita. Standard cold remedy for 20 years —in tablet form—safe, sure, no opiates—breaks up a cold in 24 hours—relieves grip in 3 days. Money back if it fails. The genuine box has a Red top with Mr. Hill'. picture. Al All Drat Seers. BELCHING Caused by Acid -Stomach Let HAT02 , 11C, the wonderful madam etoinach remedy, give You quick relief from disgusting belching, food -repeating, inligestion, bloated, gassy stomach, dyspep- sia, heartburn and other stomach miseries They are all caused by Acld-Stomach from whit h about nine people out of ten suffer In one way or another. One writes as fol- lows: \Before I used EATONIC. I could not eat a bite without belching it right up, sour and bitter. I have nut had a bit of trouble since the first tablet.\ Millions are victims of Acid -Stomach without knowing it. They are weak and ailing, have poor digestion, bodies improp- erly nourished although they may eat heart- ily. Grave disorders are likely to follow if an acid -stomach Is neglected. Cirrhosis or the liver, intestinal congestion, gaetritie, catarrh of the stomach—theee are only • few of the many ailment' often caused by Acid -Stomach. A sufferer from Catarrh of the Stomach of 11 years' standing writes: \1 had catarrh of the etornach for 11 long years and 1 never found anything to do me any good—Just temporary rellef—until I used IOATONIC. It is a wonderful remedy and I do not want to be without it.\ If you are not feeling quite right—lack energy and enthusiasm end don't know Just where to locate the trouble—try FCATONIC and see how much better you will feel in every way. At all drug stores—a big box for 60c and your money back If you are not satisfied. Every IVoman Knows that clean, snow-white clothes are a constant source of pleasure. Red Cross Ball Blue if used each week pre- serves the clothes and makps them look like new. 'try it and see for yourself. All good grocers sell it; 5 cents a pack- afe. St. Louis Correspondence School of Singing, inclu.iIng voice culture and eight reading: co/ iptoto courae covering twelve months, $16. You can train yourself to teach others. Ad- dress Inguli k remittancea to Prof.Mtemp• son. The University. Pine gc 16111, St. Louis, Ancient Football, I hina played football long before Japan. so 14.11g ago Dint the football wits stuffed eith Ilitir until the fifth century, when the ingenious Chinese thought of inflating it. LET \DANDERINE\ BEAUTIFY HAIR Girls! Have a mass of long, thick, gleamy hair Let \Danderine\ save your hair and double its beauty. You can have lots' of long, thick, strong, lustrous hair. Don't let it stay lifeless, thin, scraggly or fading. Bring back its color, vigor and vitality. Get a 85 -cent bottle of delightful \Dander1ne\ at any drug or toilet coun- ter to freshen your scalp; check dam druff and falling hair. Your hair needs this stimulating tonic, then its life, color, brightness and abundance will return—Hurry 1—Ada'. Gives the Old Gentleman Away. , Pansy Pyetin objeets strongly to the way father uses the English language. Ills graminsir Is so uniformly correct as to show that he doesn't go to thee - tees or cabarets or any place. Children'sCoughs may be checked end more serious conditions of the throat often will be avoided by promptly Orbs' the ctuld • does ef ea% . . 4