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About The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.) 1909-1920 | View This Issue
The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.), 12 Feb. 1920, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053199/1920-02-12/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
THZ STANFORD WORLD 48,000 Drug Stores Soil It. Five million people use it to KILL COLDS *kl. I LL'S CASCARA 1111ININL nRomtot Standard cold remedy for 20 years —in tablet form—safe, sure, no criates--breaka up a cold in 24 hours—relieves grip in 3 days. Money back if it fails. 'fits genuine box has a Red top with Mr. 11111's picture. At All Drug Stores New South Wales Has Enormous Capacity for Food Production The vast acreages of arable lands in New South Wales are rapdly becoming a factor in the food -producing power of the world. New South Walem has an area of 310,700 square miles, or as much territory as the combined area of the New England States plus New York, New Jereey. Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania. 011ie, Indiana, Michigan, and a portion of Illinois. The climate is similar to that of Southern France, Southern California or Italy. Everything that can be raised in a tem- perate or tropical climate will grow abun- dantly in New South Miles in the north- ern part of the State, bananas, coffee, sugar cane and passion fruit grow side by side .with potatoes, cereals, tobacco, onions, grapes, and cool-climate fruits. The products range front cotton to silk, olives, corn, barley and wheat. New South Wales is to be classed as a \new country\ and \The Last Great West.\ Already about six million acres of its lands are under crops. Forty mil- lion bushels of wheat are produced an- nually, anti the wheat acreage is increas- ing by leaps and bounds. The country is largely devoted to pas. band purposes, and wool is \king.\ New South Wales Information &mean 149 Broadway, New York City Looking Forward. They ha vi' just become engaged. -\I shall love,\ she cooed, \to shore I I your griefs and troubies,\ \Iltir. darling,\ . he purred, \I have mute.\ \No.\ she agreed; \but I mean when •we arc married.\ \CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP\ IS CHILD'S LAXATIVE Look at tongue! Remove poisons from stomach, liver and Bowels. Accept \California\ Syrup of Figs only—look for the mune California on the package, then you are sure yout child Is has ing the best and most harm- leati laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love its delicious fruity taste. Full directions for child's dose on each boh tie. Give it without fear. Mother! You must say \California.\ —Adv. Quite to the Point. \I bad a nhairp iiispute W1111 lily husband. - \Whitt Moon?\ \Pin money.\ .•-••-•-••-•-•-•-• 0- • •-•-•-•-••-•-••-•-•-•-•-•--0. COAX 'EM Stop Whipping Bowels into Activity, but take \Cascarets\ ••••••••••••••• -11-.•••••••••••••• Put aside the Salts. Pills, Castor Oil, or Purgative Waters that irritate and Irish the bowels into action but which. do not thoroughly cleanse, freshen and purify these drainage organs, and have no effect whatever upon the liver mid stomach. Keep your \Insides\ pure and fresh with Cascarets, whieh thoroughly cleanse the stomach, remove the undi- gested, sour food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out Of the system all the con- stipated wrastoomatter and poisons in the howeim which are keeping you half sick, headachy, and iniserable. Cnscarets tonight will make you feel great by morning. They work while you sleep—ftever gripe, sicken or cause inconvenience, Cascarets cost so littie too.—Adv. ,k woman can't talk as much tit a funeral as she can at a weddlog, hut she seems to enjoy It anyway. Love originates In the heart; broils las nothing to do with It , Parsistent Coughs me dangerous. (let prompt relief from • piso'.. Stops Imitation; soothing. affective and sak foe young and old. No opiates la PIS 6 , 1 1 , 11 ti --__ . ___ THE By ImposrfoR FRANK L. PACKARD $4449k04-0404 - 064404:44 1- 4M0 3 nt *00,04v0MAINNMA00 - * ENTER GUNGA. Synopsis—Stacey Wallen, tint mate of the bark Upolo, in the Java sea, is the sole survivor of the crew, all victims of yellow fever. Ting Wah, Chinese sailor, last man to die, tells Wallen be and five other Chinamen were sent aboard by \Drink -House Sam.\ no- torious character of Singapore, to kill him. This recalls to Millen an Incident et his childhood which scents connected with the confes- sions. While delirious, Walton en- ters in the ship's log the fact of Iris death and abandons the vessel Scottialt trader there, MacKnight, in • small boat. Wallen's boat drifts to the island of Arru and a A cares for him. Learning that a ship is in port on the other side of the Island, twenty miles .away, Walien, though unfit for the task, starts to reach it, but falls exhausted on the trail. There he is found by a roan and woman who are from the ship he 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 steamer, the Monleigh, Captain Laynton. I.aynton tells Wallen the vessel had been char- tered by Wallen's father to find him, the father knowing his son to be In grave danger because of a long-standing feud between the elder %Yellen and a notorious pirate, Rant Gillett Singh. Laynton also informs hint of the death of his father, explaining that the fatality was bekleved to be an accident. Wallen instantly associates his fa- ther's death with the Chinaman's confession on the !Credo. He takes over the charter of the vessel and sails for Singapore. Helen MacKay explains that she is on a visit to an aunt in Sumatra. Wallen agrees to take her there, Just touching at Singapore. where lie is determined to fathom the mystery of \Drink - Mouse Soiree\ eimilly. While look- ing over Ma father's papers. which haynton had turned over to MM. Watien is slariled by the thrusting of a piece of paper beneath Ins cabin door. On the paper is traced a human kand from elicit all hut the forefinger hail been hacked away. Ile recognized it as of sinis• ter import. connected with the &nth of his father. At Singapore Wallen leaves the ship, alone, and visits Drink -House Sam's bar -room, determined to force from him an Muth:lotion of the mystery. An- nor.neing himself as Stacey Wallen. Sans denounces him an a liar and the crowd in the her -room attacks him. Wnllen escapes, but waits outside the place, having made up his mind to have an Interview abuse with Ram. CHAPTER V—Continued. But at nt the expiration of that lime he WAS stealing along the opposite side of the street in front of Drink -House Sam's again,: and. grateful now for the dinginess of the surnsmalings find the absence of lights, slimasi into a nar- row areaway. or more properly a space some threic' feet wide bet ween two buildings facing Drink•House Sam's, mid lay down upon the ground. By mid by Drink -House Sam wool(' 'go to bed, by and by that light In the barroom would go out, by and by the hangers-on would he dispersed, and by and by somewhere in that house he would get Drink -House Sitio alone. Wallen 11'3' there, his eyes on the barroom thaw across the street. (Meese slonally someone stniggled In, neon - atonally someone straggled out ; but It was ninny hours. while he grew stiff and cramped. before 'he place began to empty out—before Drink -House Stim himself at the doorwoy was eject- ing, with some force and more profan- ity. what appeared to be the last of him guests. Anti then the light in the barroom was extinguished. It wns very late; but precisely witut lime it was Wallen did not know, only that lie had lain there foto an Intermi- nable space. Well, he had wulted so 'nag he could afford to wait still an' 'flier hour—until Drink-llouse Sam mod whoever else was in tbe pince bad got to bed and got to 'deep. This Ii ne be would leave nothing to chance. A light appeared suddenly in the end room on tine veranda over the bar- room—mai Wallen's lips parted In a twisted smile. Luck DE11111! That was Drink -House Satn's room! The man. silimuotted agitinst the light. Was open- ing the veranda door, for Mr probably. The room obviously then had two doors, for Marie hail catered it front the interior of the tatese. Wallet) smiled again. lie writ(' enter from the veratida. 1.110k wits coming now In greater measure thAn'he had dared to hope. The light In the room went out. The minutes passed, a quarter of an lom r. a half, three-quarters—and theo Nallen sat up, unlaced his hoots rtml, tying them together with their strings, slung them around his neck. Like a shrolow, a little blacker than the surnrunding. blackness, he was across the street, and quikly, agilely, silently, was swarming up one of the veranda posts. He pursed as he reached the rail to Asten—the roil was old anti It had creaked a little, not loudly, but—who knew !—It might have been heard. Thera was not ariaiind. Ile swung over onto ;he veranda and noved cautiously forward. in a nal- . mein be was at Marie's door. Again he listened. Nothing—not a sound! Only darkness within, pitch blackness —and he could see nothing. (Copyright.) Ills face was set now, Ills jaws itord-clamped. Ills Watt was simple— to choke this human devil into submis- sion before the other could make a sound, to get his lingers first of all upon the ruffian's throat. He was stealing into the room, feel- ing before Mtn. Ile touched the foot of the bed and guided himself along tile side of it. Stealthily, inch by inch, he crept to- ward the head of the liod, reached it. Iris hands shot forward; lunging swift- ly with the body weight behind them, closed on the man's throat—and the next instant he was staggering back- ward, a low cry of horror on his lips. His hands were wet—wet with warm blood ! Ile could not see, but he knew it was blood. Unnerved, shaken to the soul, a !manic upon him, he stood there for a moment, his mind in riot. Then, fight - lug desperately for self-control, he took a match from hie pocket and lighted It. Ile closed his eyes on the sight. Some one had done the horrible work only too well—the 1111111'S throat Wlig only it gaping %%aortal. The match in Wallen's lingers still burned on, forgotten. Ile must get out of here. •Drink-Ilouse Sant's mouth wits closed forever. He could have laughed aloud, hys- Jerically, at the ghastly irony of that. Ile must get away unseen before— what was that? There was some one else In the room. Some one moved. The match. in its dying flame, spurted up. A tall. gaunt form 100.11181 before him. That (ace! n'itere had he seen that face? The match Ilroppol from his fingers. That face! It seemed .1) be associated with dreams ---of long ago. And then a voice spoke: \Sahib come quickly.\ And then he knew. It was (bingo. • CHAPTER VI, The Vendetta. \You Glingn!\ 1Vallea whispered hoarsely. \You—you 11111 this. Fair God's suke, whatt does it mean? How slid you en 'uric here? Witere did Pm come from?\ \Sahib. there Is no time to talk,\ the other unswered gravely. \l'here \Sahib There Is No Time for Talk.\ Is touch danger. Come quickly. We will go back to your ship.\ \You know about that—the ship?\ mumbled Walton. \Ilow—\ \Sahib alinost piteously, \come.\ There followed for Wallen a pat.e of time that he could neither estimate Iii duration 11111* of W110tie PMI'S In the in he eoll111 form any 1.onerete a - hole. There were dark streent and darker byways. and alwoys. before him, wraithlike in his loose white garb, the larboard figure of the East Italian; and then a boat from some diu.k cor- ner of a jetty and they were in it, arid Gunge was rowing. His mind had been :n chaos; pictur- ing tigain and again the fearsome sight in the glow of tItat burning match; try- ing to span the tea years since me had last seen this mon; striving futilely hut with a sort of itinddening, Irre- sponsible insistenve. to grapple with this and nun question that came and went in lightning succession; tool sl- ump; reverting to that black room, the sputtering match, and Drink -House Main upon the lied again. • And now they were far out in the harbor and the Writer 1\fla very still, and under the nmonlight it wall very lOack, and a little ahead he could see the ' MonleIgh ; and then' Ounga lay upro t .his oars and spoke. \Sahib Is It true whnt• they say — that the master is dead?\ 'flue question In its abruptness, its sIgnifleance, come like it physicol shock to Wallen; but. too, It roused him, cleared his brain of Ito chaotic obses- sion, and brotight him hack, alert and tense, to actualities and his Immediate surroundings. \It is true,\ him answered slowly. \They say aboard that It was on acct. dent; that father accidentally shot himself while he was cleaning an auto- matic pistol.\ (bingo's loco warm In the moonlight, and Walien stared at it now and could no( take his eyes away. A whiteness came upon tite swarthy features, tile lips quivered tremulously like a child's; and then it seemed to be 'mother face, distorted, an inhuman passion in the twitching muscles, the lips parted and tightairawn across the gums, showing the teatit as a beast might show them as t crouches to spring. And then this, too, was gone, for the head was bowed over the oars, nod Waller) could no longer see. Presently (lungs looked up, but now hls face was Impas.alv... \It Is fate, sahib,\ lie said in a low,. strange wily. \Allah is rreat. I have loved the master many years, and now I am the nervant of his son. Sahib, wili you pay blood with blood?\ \You mean,\ mid' %Yellen, his own voice low, \that you, too, know•it was not an accident—that it was murder? AIN that Drink -House Sam, though he Is -as miles away, had a band in it, and that was why you killed hint?\ \Sahib said Gungo softly, \I did not kill the man; I was too late!\ \You didn't kill him!\ Wnlien - cried. \Then who—\ lie leaned forward anti gt•Ipped the other's wrist fiercely. \(bingo the time has come far me to know. Why was tay father murdered, and by whom? Why did he ilve that strange life In that old gray, stone house? Why did Drink -House Sam set a crew of Chinese murderers loose upon me? And thls\—he held out the diagranm of the human . hand with its missing tingers—\what does this sig- nify, and n•by was it slipped under the door of my cabin last night?\ In the moonlight Otinga's face was working again, and his eyes, narrowed, seemed to be searching intently the surface of the water around him. \Among the crew, sahib,\ lie asked, \there is a Kanaka, tall man with great shoulders, and whose lip Is scarred as though it had been cut across?\ \Yes!\ Tite word was a sharp in. take of Wallen's breath. \Mien it is true,\ said Gunga. \Tonight he slipped away from the ship and swum ashore; and it may be, for Allah Is all powerful, that he will swini back again. I lay hidden, sahib, where I hove lain hidden for many nights, and he came and told the story; and I, (bingo, liatened unknown to hint, 1111f1 the light was gone front my life, as he told how he bail *hot the master through the porthole nnd thrown the Pistol and those things to clean it with in upon the floor. \And he told of you, sahib, and the strange way you came aboard the ship, and hosv twice he lind tried to kill you, but fate had not willed it 80. And at lamt, thinking . that your death was sure, either by his hand or by one in Singapore, and thinking to torture you with fenmr he put the paper with the hand upon It under your cabin door. \And other things he told as well, suhilm. \Of how the captain and the crew thought sormigely of the voyage, of how, through him, they came to whis- per among thentselvea that it was a treasure -hunt ; and hoc.', the day after j'011 ellulle libOgr(1, before he knew the ghIp vas going to Singapore, that you might not escape by going ashore . at 80111e port where they would not be waiting for you as they would at Singapore, (hunt you might even he forced by the captain to slay on board, he pretended to have found a slip of paper with al certain latitude and lonith tilde upon It which he mode pretense you had dropped from our pocket. ' \This he carried to the captain, thinking that the captain would believe the treasure within 4iiA reach and search for it on his own account In - smite of you, sahib. and so keep you Omani. for the rawer n•as the position Rom Guild), Singh had given the Ken- , irk, as he Itati also given the drawing of the hand; ht the captain only took the paper :lad bade him hold his longue and—\ \Milt said Wallen quickly. • \It is certain, then, that Captain Laynton and the crew had nothing to do with . my Dither's murder—with Drinkjlouse Suit 7'' ?' \It Is certain, sahib,\ Gunga an- swered. \Though too, there • are strange timings about (liar ship—but the tale is for itifother time.\ \And this num Outfit) Singh?\ Wat s lefi questioned througn thin lips. Gunga's eyes were atilt searchIng the water aroutul him in the same in - 'emit, curious way. \have patience, stahlh,\ he said, \Time (loot not press how. It is well. that you should' know t.11 before you go aboard: . The ship Is to Buil at once, then?\ \Yes said Wallen. , Gunga tells of Ram Gulab Singh. (TO UN CONTINUED.) \RESULTS MORE THAN CLAIMED , ISo testifier Mr. 1 0 . AffkmDr. Hex 44, Rotolle, Texas PE -RU -NA THE REMEDY FOR EVERYDAY ILLS \I have used Pe-ru-na for years in cases of colds and catarrh. The results have been good, in fact, more than you claimed. Have also taken Lacupia and can easily say it is one of the best blood puri- fiers I have ever used.\ Mr. J. F. Arendt For Catarrh and Catarrhal Conditions The evidence of one man like Mr. Arendt is more convincing proof to you of the merits of Pe-ru-na than any written words of ours. For fifty years Pe-ru•na bas been the standby of the American hinny for diseases duo to catarrhal inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the organs of the body. Thousands, like Mn. Arendt, have proved the effectiveness of Pe-rmna for coughs ' colds, nasal catarrh, stomach, bowel and liver.disorders or any disease characterized by a catarrhal condition. If your suffering is the result of a catarrhal disorder try Pe-ru-na. It la a true, tried medicine. Bold Everywhere Tablets or Liquid Illosety-Seven per wad. st the popes him catarrh hs Hasa form. The tritest teaching Is living; and the primary philanthropy is to live a good life.—Edward Howurd Griggs. GOT A CHILD'S COAT BY DYEING GARMENT \Diamond Dyes\ Help Make New Out- fits for Youngsters. • Don't worry about perfect • results. Use \Dimond Dyes.\ guaranteed ta give R new, rich, fadeless color to nny fobt•ic, whether it be wool, silk, linen. cotton or mixed goods,—dresses. !dowses, stockings, skirts, children's coats. feathers—everything! Direction Rook In package tells how to diamond dye over any color. To match any material, have denier show you \Dirunnott Dye\ Color Card.—Adv, GAY AND POPULAR RESORT Biarritz, In Southern France, Noted as the Scene of European Fri- volity and Fashion. One of the gayest . anti most popti- tor watering resorts of Europe is Itior- ritz In France. uhout forty miles from the Spanish border. Its nearness to Spain has colored its language anti or- chlteeture somewhat, giving it the pie- toresquenoss of both eountries. It is a beautiful place. with its creama•ol- 'wed, red-rosifed villas, dark pine trees, winding walks and. crescent of white sandy beach guarded at either end by high. rocky blufl's, rising abruptly from 111e sett, lieforil the war it was time aeene of frivolity and fashion, rival- ing alisitte Carlo in its gambling. danc- ing and display. It was it favorite resort with one of England's more ployful kings in his lighter moments. Indeed, main striad iii ,called Rue Edouard VII in honor of him. The war brought a sudden change of mood to Illorritz: Its. gambling ca- sinos and hotels were turned into hos- pitals for wounded French, and later American soldiers. Orinr.eonvoys of warships passed close to its :shores on their wily through the Ray . imf Biscay. Numerous ships were torpedoed in might of.tim shore by the German sub : ono -hies lurking along the Spanish coast. :The coast Was heavily mined, and from time to time the detonation at u mine would shake the: town. First law that ever was made was shattered—,that which preseribed what Adam and Eve altouldn't do. BOSCHEE'S SYRUP. A cold is probably the most corn. mon of all disorders and when neglect- ed is apt to be most dangerous. Sta- tistics show that more than three times as many people died from in- fluenza last year, as were killed in the greatest war the world has ever known. FGr the last fifty-three years 13oseltee's Syrup hal been used for coughs, bronchitis, colds, throat ir- ritation and especially lung troubles. It gives the patient a good night's rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration in the porning. Made in America and usedrin the homes of thousands of families all over the Civilized world. Sold everywkere.—Adv. Volubility Not Wanted. When you tind people wino can say Tontines about nothing you can usual- ly pat it down they are short SOIlle• where. A man with idea\; that count seldom wears out his vocabulary try- ing t4) iolvertise the idea. He lots the ideas stand on thefr own feet. The fact Is Ile doesn't need to do mo much for a thing that can stand nione. And whors more, ideas have 11 way of being able to deliver pretty gtrting ar- gument. When they are founded on truth there is no way of getting hack of them. The filet that others refuse to tu•cept them does not discount them. They atoml on their own merits to be recognized nod tote& when people learn to opproOlate their value. His- tory reveals the fact that her biggest men were men of stnall speech. How It Started. With the death of Sir WIllIam Osier the old story (hut Inc advocated chloro- forming men at sixty is being repeated In its original unqualified form. It Is worth repeating that In his speech which gave rlse to the sensational story he referred jocosely to \the ad- mirable 'agleam\ in Anthony Tr011ope's novel, \The Fixed Period,\ \of a col- lege Into %vial' at sixty men retired for a year of contemplation before a pOrteeful departure by chloroform.\ and speculated on what the effect would have been upon human prog- ress.—Springfield Republican. • •••11, ••-- Th4 Popular Drink ~so rnual used nowadays in place of coffee INSTANT POSTUM Sold at the same fair price as al- ways. No raise. At grocers everywhere Made by poetum Cereal- Comy . lany Ilotle Creels., Micbt5ou ••... • sfItas