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About The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.) 1909-1920 | View This Issue
The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.), 29 Jan. 1920, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053199/1920-01-29/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
sal THE STANFORD WORLD 1 WOMEN OF MIDDLE AGE May Pass the Critical Period Safely and Comfortably by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Summit, N. J.. -\I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound dur- ing Change of Life and I think it is a good remedy in such a condition. I could not digest my food and had much pain and burning in my stomach after meals. I could not sleep, had backache, and worst of all were the hot flashes. I saw in the papers about Vegetable Compound so I tried it. Now I feel all right and can work better. You have my_ permission to publish this letter.\ --VICTORIA KoPeL, 21 Oak Ridge Ave., Summit, N. J. If you have warning symptoms such as a sense of suffocation, hot flashes, headaches, backache, dread of im- pending evil, timidity, sounds in the ears, palpitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, con- stipation, variallie appetite, weakness( inquietude, and dizzmess, get a bottle of LydiaE. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound and begin taking the medicine at once. We know it will help you as it did yrs. Kopp). The Distributing Point. \How dm? \ 1 \1 114. \IkvaYs to he in a Idale.\ \I suppose they get it front their faintly jet's.\ Catarrh Cannot Be Cured by LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a lova] disease. greatly influ- enced by constitutional conditions. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will cure catarrh. It Is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is composed of some of the beat tonics known, combined with some of the best blood purifiers. The perfect combination of the Ingredients in BALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is what produces such won- derful results in catarrhal conditions. Druggists 115c. Testimonials free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, Ohio. Let It Go at That. MeNtitt—Se yeti teen. hit by an auto? Do you expect any damages? Arlene -1M slob:fled; I've lied enough. \ROSY -FIT\ If Bilious, get your Pep and Color back with \Cascarets\ • •••••y••••.•-•-• •••••-•-••• I 01 1 ”i1,01... , occbges Dim, Sallow Skin, and Miserable Iiend 00104 come from it torpid liver and sluggish 110WelS, Which cnuse the alum - itch to become tilled with undigested Fond which sours and ferments. form- ing gasee, and pastels. Casearets tonight urn give your bilious liver and nonstipa led bowels a thorough cleans- ing anti have- you feeling clear. bright and ae fit as ii fiddle by •ifing. l'asearets never sicken or incon• vetilenre you like nasty Calomel, Salts, Oil, or griping I'll Is. They work witIle you steep.—Adv. Naturally. \The poet sang to) ids love. 'Drink to lee only with thine eyes.'\ \She Meat have had littuld eyes.\ c-oo-o+ HEAD STUFFED FROM CATARRH OR A COLD Says Cream Applied in Nostrils' Opens Air Passages Right Up. vo.5.44444.4-4-0-4elleeteeereeee)4444 4 0 -04. Institut relief—no walling. Your elooggett nostrils open right tip; the Stir infest - twos of your head clear anti you coin breathe freely. Ni, more hawking. snuffing. blowing. headuche, drynesto. No at for breath at night; tom 1.11111 or catarrh disappears. (let n small bottle of Ely's Creme Mahn from your druggist -now. Apply it little of this (regrow, antiseptic, heeling o•reatii in your nostrils. It pen- etrates through every air passage of the head. soothes the inflamed or swot- lett moteenrs membrane and relief comet! Instenfly. It's jest flue. Den't stay Muffed up with a cold or nasty catarrls—Adv. l'hys1 , 111 Callrage. eau ...be bought cheap, bet morel eetwage. is (Minit- el:a:male lit nits price. elm; - little hint is often NVOrth mere Ilium n 11 toe of advice. INFLUENZA starts with a Cold Kill ea° Cold. At the first sneeze take 1k4 ILL'S QUININ Standard cold remedy for 20 years —in tablet forrn--safe, sore, no optatta---brelks up a cold in 24 hoers--relievea grip it 3 dsys. Money back if it foils. 'the gentling box inss a Red top with Hr. picture. At Ali Drug Stored ( cb'wftr:y 9 r 1 / 4. ) 3i ( I , A SCRAP OF PAPER. -- Synopsis-Stacey Wallen, first male of the bark 17aolo. In the Java sea,, Is the sole survivor of the crew. all of yellow fever. 'Dug Chinese sailor, last tnan to die. tells %Vatten he and five other Chinamen were sent aboard by \Hrink-liouse Sam,\ no- toriotio charm -ter of Singapore, to kill him. This recalls to Walton an inehtent of Ills C1111(111001 WWII Netlike 4-mtnertea wth the es- f es - shin. While delirious, W.Jlon en- ters in the Watt's log tin- fact of his death and abandons the vessel 1,, a small hoot. Wrillen's boat , drifts to the !shunt of Arru and a Scottish trader Mere. Mar Knight, cares for him. Learning that a ship la In port nn the other shity of the Island, twenty miles sway. Wallen, though unfit for the task, starts to retch It, but falls eshousted on the trail. There he Is found by a man and WOITIN II who me from the ship be was trying to reach. Mott first mate, and Helen ,MacKay, a passenger. They convey him to the vessel. The ship proves to be a small tramp ateamer, the Monteigh. Captain Laynton. Laynton tells Wallen the vessel had been char- tered by M'allen's father to thud him, the father knowing his son to be in grave danger bonuses - ft a long-standing feud between the elder Wallen and a nob - twain pirate, llam Hulot, Singh 11.avidon also informs hint of the death of his f:tther, explaining that the fatality was believed to he an neeident. WAI10.11 instantly assn, later his fa- ther's death with the chinaman'a confession on ll.e Vpolo. lie takes over the charter of the vessel and sails for Singapore Helen MacKay explalna that she Is on it vtsit to an aunt In Sumatra. Wallen agrees In take her thrle, hist twirling at Singapore, where he is deterntined to fathom the mystery of 'Drink - Douse Sam's\ enmity. (ard COAPRAeSer ton,\ Ile said quietly. \No shore lenve for anybody—and steam up. I'll only be ashore a few hefts, and we'll be amity from here rigida before morn - lee.\ Captain Leynton was pulling dubi- ously fit hie chin. \Yes; and by morning the cestoms mid miarnittire. oflicials will lie looking for the ship that slipped out without tiny 'elearance V \ - \I hardly think Hie nr- vital will create motel of at furor,\ re- plied %Vallee dryly. \I've it few hours' !elven. business ashore. end then we'll get Miss alacleny right across to S11111/11111—liatt I don't went it rowdy, drunken crew la do It with.\ \All right !\ said Leynton. \What- ever yiet say, 311.. Wane's\ Wenn), with it noel, stepped aft along the (leek, entered the sinoking room preparatory to descending the nomptinimiwtiy--11 MI came face to face with 1 1(.11.11 affteleity. . t.ffileot out merrily. \Slutettoo: e mem, 'the city of Hulls,' you knew. Don't run your head Into ofte of thee! 'Peeler!\ And with ti Wave of her band she was gone.. It brought a sudden, premonitory ellock to Wallen—and then at grim, clad smile. The city of lions! It win a only it joke with her, p little light - everted !ling—with lam, God knew It might prove a ghastly reality! Al first, when Ito hati found that paper, on his cabin floor, he bad thotig . ht, as he had told her, that he would take her straight to Setnetra, get her off the ship; mid then tfecond thoughts bed convinced iffin that the danger which threatened him did not threaten her. She was safe there On hoard. But this thing—It wa,s not only the personal peril—it rose a shuddering, mocking barrier between them! Mock- ing? Yes! lie or they, the devil or devIle who had murdered his father, were playing ot it hi him as a eat play); with n mouse! Why had nothing happened to him in l i t ii i t o f f i to t1: l o w4 le of itunglned sectit•ity? His lips thinned intro a straight line. I. perhaps they would play too I. Ile would settle it tonight. i When be Came back to the ship he v. Mild know—or there would be one less scoundrel in Singapore! That es wine he WSIS going for now—to 1 itink-House : Sinn of Singapore. - Vim was it aboard the MonleIgh who had put that paper under his eithin door? She had called him grumpy till that day—anti all that day ' he hail been stadving the crew, oda- loguitig in his mind every man aboard. It could not well he all—a plot in - waving the whole ship and crew seemed era of tee queetion. Not one of the officers had he any \Of course.\ elm all iii demurely. \1 reneon tic ,ii , pPet alcove the others! think It's perfectly splendid that you though it 5515 true, and a little ins- ane. going to nut the ship nil the way turbine now, Hutt Captain Laynton, tia SI111111 t rat all necomit of little ine; in turning over his father's effects. but I think It's Hillbilly selfish of you had riot Included the fatal pistol that, to go) ashore n11 alone this evening if the story were true, wits obviously alien we're only going, to he here for his father's protwily—but tent might a few !toms. Please. ells Ynelit-Cap- readily haVe been but an oversight. tato. wipe you take me too?\ There was .114alt. who had grown It was the first time he would have more surly evoory day. ii veilitel her If he could have donor so. w„e s „ shook his boat!, mows at , \Is-you—Opt is. eel!, you see, Miss 3IacKay-A—I-111111 very well. Look here!\ cried 1eallen impulsively—and caught 114.r betide mid hold them. \I know you're more titan half serious, and that you're keeely disappointed at not going ashore. Its true I've been a lipiet today; hut lesei worried. This morning I itad aititoet made up CHAPTER IV—Continued. my minol to run to) Siemens find not touch here nt ail; lout—I itere'm it Hub. And so they had !oilseed those clays. business that I felt I mute attend to mid it MIS OW fourth night now since . lilts evening. and—well. that's Wila t Ile liuuui faille aboard—and 'row I'm going ashore for, they stetted In. In Singapore. derslatid, Vin sure, NIks mooKos.\ lie lay tossing in his bunk. A tumult Iler widened, 'partly in inerri- of thought kept Ills bruin netive mid pent at this contuslom, partly in a puzzled way. \Oh !\—there was only bewilderment in her eyes tem. not, quite Singapore\ Whet would Singa- pore bring hen? Milo WISS this Drink - House Sem? It tuattereol n great deal -now—a greet deal mere than it had mattered before. For before, altfir it sort of berserk rage, be had hetet ellen!: to take II Ch11111-e, end: win or liters retake his life against this devil, wh,). ever he might be. (het Mei tried to strike.. him (hewn it Mime warning, without al elinnee•to defend himself : but noW hits life ineentetiore to him— he Wantect•to live—fur her. \Thank Ohl,\ he muttered. \that at least everything is all right on bontel here!\ . lie turned over anti lay for perhaps len minute -A. trying to) compose hielso.if to sleep --but his eyes insisted on re- melning fastened on a queer little. white patch by the door. %Sled waft . It? It wasn't the moonlight thrt wish the porthole refleeting on anything. Ile raised impel( tip ell Ills '4h/ow Reveled times in make sure of Finally, In n fret fel Way. he got out of Ills tonne to investigate. it Was a piece of paper that had evidently been pushed in under the threshold—bni whether len minutes or two itom . s age M. hail no idea. Wallen picked up the paper, switched on the light—and suddenly it seemed as though his immediate surroundings had vanished, and he wits living emelt a scene of ninny years ago. Ile wits stnntling on the stairway of that grim, ! gray. lonely house in the dead of night, tt trembling child in his nightclothes, anti below In the hall, holding a Candle. Was Ilia father, and Gunge wns bending over a form on the floor, and his fa- ther's voice was In hie ears: \Look mute's Gunge. Has lie one finger on the left linnol?\ And then (lunge's fonswer: \I have looked, sahib, end the hand is whole.\ 'alien's (nee was strangely white. On the piece of pnrchtmeit that he . held was crudely trared a !minim bane. end ihe fingers. save for the forefingee.\ had the appearance of having been Lacked away. CHAPTER V. Drink-House Sam of S:ngapore. There lire two harbors et Shognpore; one opposite the town, 'which nithough little ntore then an .opon rondstend where the ships discharge hy epees of lighters, after& a safe mu ei convenient enchorage; the other, land•locked, fringed with wharves and wurehounes, Iles three miles west. It.was nlrently dusk when the Mote leigh, finding a berth nnionget a nest of junks, selling and ste:un craft of oil descriptions and all netionalitiee, dropped anchor In the roadstead at ffingepore. Wallen !Mese& foe n final word on the threshold of Captain Layiston's rehire \It's endorse - eel. then, Captain Layn- \Me Sabe,\ He Replied. sure I understand. I thoought it \Mlle settled when we left Pala tie should come here.\ \Yes so it wt . 's.\ he VieliflOWledged aWkW111111:r. He bit his lips. Ile eould not tell her Hint hie brain was sick with the effitrt to grapple With a peril that he knew now beyond question lurked iffiettrd the ship, It time because it wile 1111Seell„ because he could not Identify It In the form of any our, or two, or auil Omani the Alp end fight if lit the open, hall made the liners fence that morning like a hideous nightmare! , I'll—I'll exlin tomorree \ pa v, Mtge MaeKny,\ he snit! hurriedly. \You \I'm not 7\ she laughed. \I'm only keeping Yew\ And Wishing bile Sli»'• fully toward the compunienway, she rrn out onto the deck. A moment later, NVallen, al the foot of the ship's lathier, was running his eye sharply over the half score of shore boats that pushed anti bumped against each other mei, the gengwey's pletform, end whotee tenements at the prospect of a fare were screaming and yelling in a frantic effort to at- tract his special and undivided attens Hon. A Malay Ito:Milian lied the strate- gic position alongside the gritting. , 'Millen unceremoniously pushed the craft, away with his foot, and beck- oned to a Chinemen who' wns next In line. As he clambered Into the boat he looked up, Helen Alneleny was leaning over the: mil of the boat deck. \Take good cite° of yourself l\ she WIIR that Miele was easily accounted for--tite Its witness the ride at Pohl, if it had not hetet glaringly .evident op board since then, was attentive to MIRO Mitcleay, and resented his. Walletes usurpation of what lie evidently core Mitered his prerogative. \Vhat of the crew then? 'flitoy were it Mud lot and a poly. glut one! The Efiglish and Americans amongst them had every appearance of being the se•eepinge of (be slums of Lon - (leis Liverpool, New York, and, for men of their Ilk, the more rielottS sea- perts oof the far Ettet. The rest were of every natIonelity—two of the coal- passere were Chinese coolies, the stew - Wax from the West Indies, tile cook Was a leren•limati from Port Start, and two Danes, a Swede, a. Kainaka. from the Sandwich Islands; mid three Japanese completed the rose er. Weikel looked up, and fixed his eyeet ; speetilativele on his Chinese imamate They Were rffinost nt the landine. ,e \You snip. Drink -House Sant?\ hi ! abruptly. The Chinaman smirked knowingly, \ale sales\ lie replied. \All might,\ eald Wallen \You take xs e r „ me there, ltut first, you take me whete the stores are, I - want to buy sottte things, and I don't knew my way , about:\ \Me suite.\ Said the Chinamen again. \All stone veils . glood guide.\ He proved to Ile. WithIll half '-an hour after !entities Walien had eojn- pletee, the purehase ef an excellent nu - toluene pistol and ammunition, tind was following the Chinaman buck along it dark street near the welen front. Another few minutes of Deist- ings end Writings, anti the Chintuitan bed halted before all uninviting-took- Ing hostelry in an equally uninviting - looking neighborhood. \DlInir-Douse Sam's.\ nnnounced the guide. \Illinehly you all same go 'back ship? Me wait?\ \No snit' Walien, as he mil& the other. \That's all. (Mod -night, John!\ The (lifetime!) flisappeored. Weikel surveyed the buntline be- fore which he stood. It Was_ Otte of those Eusternized-Etinepean wOoden structureg, two stories high, the4ront rooms on the second story opening di- rectly onto the veranda. With the gen- eral nir of being diftreputtibly out at elbows, it bon. all the earinarke of 'a suitor's hoarding house of the lowest type. . Wallen stepped forward, pushed the bar-room door open, and entered. A bee ran down one side; it score of small tables occupied the midn por- tion. - of tile room, and around. these .were clustered some • twenty-five or thirty rough-lonking hands, e.elltePIl.Y. on shore leave from the harbor's ship- ping—and making the most of It. Wallen's visit to \Drink - House Sam's\ saloon com- plicates matters. (TO BE CONTINUED.) _ALCOHOL - 3 PBS eget Kik* etable Preparationfor As • sinnlatingthelood byReettle• I n g ffieStottiache and 13 awls of IN l'ANTS ICH MARE ' Thereby Promoti Diteation Cheerfulness and Ilest.Cantala s neither Opl_dm,lforplitne nor NOTNAticoT IG Jeerestio710--SLetrlifils102 ,Pesestio Sea •S'e r Jibasile Satti Athe sir.1 i,nri Sna rainedAsir .,, Sarryfrea A helpf ullierne y l 1 Consti patina and Diarrhoea 1 and Feveelstutess and toss or Stler.i s :1.1V-Sitliinetherefr era•inTlifincy. rae-51niile Sienatere of :i ase9 - ieer , . ,.. Zig Cesrptun 6 ettelenr. NEAV YORIC. .tt 6 mouths old.. .-- et:Nis 351100Y --N 40 . Beam Copy of Wrapper. • SIMPLE MATTER TO DIAGNOSE Collar Salesman's Aliment Would Probably Yield to Treatment of the Right Kind. CASTORIA For Infanta and Children, Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Alwaya Bears the Signature of In Lisa For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA The collar mite:mine leaned his the enlike face over the (erminel at me and whispered: \I'm getting collar- \Whai's that?\ I .asked. tWislitig number fifteen choker around my six- teen neck. . \.e. disease peculiar to erollar !tales - men only. After one has sold these MIMI and flannel circles for awe 14.figl It of time he begins to think, walk and dream in circles and sffirale. \Mentally I cart never. arrive 'at any comelusion... I start to thitik from a I ought which alwayr a t e ,,eeetes to me to ft he bone collar Itu IOU; - *lid I inea- risibly arrive at the point where t lie - g . - an. . . • .• . • \Witeristsenkis a avails Lent elemyself •ileeentildpg ferele . e.. why) Nevin totie [s l ide of eel 1 if ie. - \Tittre . -41 neitetessflies litinstos. the stars seem fit (hues to lie it merry -go -rotted made up of linen ob- feet4. \It iiig10-1;dretott . of mounting vast circles -stele) the sky made tilt ef• mil- lioneis e et'SZiehtiSs, at the top otf . which 1$F ii gient, cotter box.\ • \Volute mail,\ I said, .\Yeel beein needs laitedering.\—Carttioei Speaker's Sore Throat. \Clergyman's sore timed\ Is, accord ' bag to' Dr. John .T. Levbeig of No - York, due to an incorrect !nether] brenthing, which eatises the spenIt- or singer to use his mneeles inenereet rind thus overtex the Menet. 1 proper wny In Itrenthe is to use dillidifttgin end the heves ing the tipper cLeet It.:1 (e' oote. Deep Laid Plot. \Mother and the gine inelet on my wearing my oldest (lollies every day and Sunday.\ said Mr. Cuitirox. economy.\ \I think It's tliplommey. If they corm keep . me looking sbabby they know I won't have the IlerVe to ShOW911/ at any of their pieties.\ The nverage malt never • casts his bread upon tile waters until it becomes etnle. After -War Coffee. P.ople old effiough to reinetniter the Civil woe are able to recall the fact that after the close of that conflict it _ wits diflictilt Mid Often Intisissilde to .obtaIn coffee. 1 . 11r101LIS SalbStitateS wei•e used, such Its parched rye, but tulle that was . comintoonly utilized hi Washington anti many other Cities wite sweet Me (aloes. The latter were first roasted end alleweil to burn sotnewlmt on the out Side. -Then thooy were mashed in water mid boiled. The water wits thus transformed into coffee. by no men et so unpalateble as might toe imagined. Seger In those days cost 2.5 cents pound. ,But the sweet potato coffee required. no stem r, mid so was Kit eel/. 1101111e111 111111k. The Vegetarian .Airinan. . \Iltibey\ 1344.4,...,94. young Plajadel. hula atidee s end neeeintn, wilt) made s Iii . illiant flying record during the war, wits talking at the Philadelphia Colin. ley. elstis about his experience me .1' it • - 4 \7 'iiiri.;vs - itite - chap,\ lie said. \wilt crashed In (Ierninity, and tramped 521 miles hawk to our lines. It took him month. and he lived the whole time tut :row turnips and camas that he dug up at night.\ \Gee!\ Said n young lady. \1 wonder how smith utul experience felt?\ \The poor guy.\ said the airmen, \told me It felt like a root mare's\ New Form of Torture. \How did you enjoy your visit to the Bli I litorshys ?\ \It WaS an ordeal.\ \How so?\ \I bad to alt through 1,000 feet of the baby.\ . \What?\ \Film you know. They were Follow- ing me molion pictures of the, little darling Enke!) between the years of one mei three.\—Itirmitighans Age - Herald. When the world is enable to under- The eaViler shotild lie known I.y the stand n men it dubs hhh a' crank, . company that keeps him. ' \ m 4. :: , ...r I ' :- ' . 4 0 1 2.W , .0116g0,1, e t (1 k, 't t t Sleep Is Sweet k / if i —so coffee / pla.ys tricks with ‘' P; 4 your nerves and % - breaks -your rest e ,.. N . , . ). k INSTANT - 1 a i v POS - TUM 1 t N 1 This economical bever- 1 i age has a rich coffee-; •i, like flavor that truly 4 ( Ni 4 / 1 satiSile§... . 4 N $ Made by . 7/ Po6tum Cereal Co. Battle Creek,Mich. , t ), Sold by Grocers and General- Stores. , $ a Amosv.. - 10,, - A' _ vee,,,Nv ofo.szowliere‘o.iteg.No\av 0