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About The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.) 1909-1920 | View This Issue
The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.), 18 March 1920, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053199/1920-03-18/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• THE STANFORD WORLD V MINIM L. 0 -4 -+++4+1.114.14.1 -44.44 4 1.•••44-4-4-1.4-4-4.4.••••••••••.+4++++++ Take Aspirin With Water Aleido is Pea ostk of Beret bitoolactute Sl000eretirericlettet of 110keliserld If your Aspirin tablets have the contains proper directions for name \Bayer\ stamped on them, Golds, Headache, Toothache, Ear - they are genuine \Bayer Tablets ache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Itheu- of Aspirin,\ proved safe by mil- matism, Neuritis, and for Pain. lions of people. The name \Bayer\ Always say \Bayer\ when buy. identifies the true world-famous Mg Aspirin. Then look for the Aspirin prescribed by physicians safety'\Dayer Cross\ on the pack - for over eighteen years. age and on the tablets. Always drink one or two glasses Handy tin boxes of twelve tab. of water after taking the tablets. lets cost but a few cents. Drug - Each ettbroken \Bayer package\ gleta also sell larger packages, Country Uses Much Cocoa. The United States is the world's largest consumer of crude cocoa, hav- ing taken in 1918 about 50 per cent of the total world production of 386,- 000 tons. The Imports of crude cocoa into this country for the fiscal year ending June 20, 1919, were 3).3,- 037.419 pounds. veined at $35,953,990, a falling oft of 21.6 per cent in quan- tity and 12.9 per cent in value from the high record of 1918. ••••le -e -e -s- •-••-• w•-• HOMELESS! Constipation, Headache, Colds, Biliousness, driven out with \Cascarets\ 11.4)-4-4-11••••••11 . .4.5••5••1••••11..-5 Drive away those persistent enemies of happiness—biliousness and consti- pation. Don't stay headachy, sick. tongue coated, sallow and miserable! Never have colds, indigestion, upset stomach or that misery -making gas. Feel splendid always by taking Cas- carets occasionally. Cascarets never gripe, sicken or inconvenience you like Calomel, Salts, 011 or nasty, harsh Pills. They cost so little and work while you sieep.—Adv. THERE TO GET INFORMATION Sandy Mush Citizens Vitally Interest- ed in Knowledge Possessed by Fellow Townsman. \When I got home tuther evening.\ reinter] a citizen et Sandy Mush, \I found a couple o' tlozen of my ne- gunintances and several fellers that I'd never heered of before, setting on my porch and otherwise hung!ng around, waiting for me.\ \What was coming off—a eurprise party, or something that -a -way r in- quired the neighbor to whom the inci- dent was being related. \Nope; nutlen' specially surprising about it. coneidering that some in- fernal liar had told '(.111 I'd been norat- ing around that I recollected when the courthouse in Tumlinville was built a bottle of flue old ticker was put In the corner stone. They wanted to know which corner.\—Kansas City Star. Life in Death. It was a dentit-hed scene. but the art director was . not satisfied with the hero's acting. \Come on!\ he Cried. \Put more life into your dying!\ When the Lot Shrinks. \I thought you told me your lot was 50 feet wide,\ snid the neighbor. \So it is.\ \Then why shovel only 40 feet of snow off your walk?\ Never the Same After That. As I was making a bed one Monday morning a friend came to see me. She walked right in and not seeing me, said: \Are you at home?\. I said: \Oh yes, I never go visiting Monday morning.\ Vben I thought how it sounded, I was awfully embarratesed, and she never acted the toward me.—Ex el et nee. BOSCHEE'S SYRUP. A cold Is probably the moseAmn. mon of all disorders end when neglect- ed is apt to be most dangerous. Sta. (Mlles show that more than three times as tautly people died from in- fluenza last year, as were killed In the greatest war the world has ever known. For the last flfty-three years Boschee's Syrup has been used for coughs, Immo:lathe 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 morning. Made in America and used in the homes of thousands of families all over the civilized world. Sold everywbere.—Adv. The Wrong Disease, A GriselleilS110 physicion was ale proached icy a patient who was In poor health. The patient PXIMIIIIMI his illness. and also the fact that he was not able to pay for the profess sionnl services at once, but would do so within a short time. Ile got the medical services and was improving nicely, an fact he bad reeovered suf- flelently to go to work. The patient met the physician. who broached the subject of his fees. The patient said: \Well. dots don't you know I was just talking to another doctor, aml he told me you doctored tHe for the wrong thing, and I don't want to pay you for doctoring me for the wrong dis- ease.\—Inditumpolis News. Benefit of Silence. \I don't see your name in the paper quite so often es it used to be, sen- ator.\ \No replied the senator. \I find It just as well not to inform the pub- lic of my whereabouts. When they don't actually know where I am it Is natural for them to believe that I am busy working for their interests,\ Extravagant. \She's extravagant.\ \Site served her husband beefsteak for dinner last night.\ \What of that? The poor man hits to eat, doesn't he?\ \Of course, but think of serving beefsteak and no company in the house.\ — Tf - Were s to he niffeti brotherly love, one has to make himself desert. Mg of it. Girls are true friends when they cry together In sympathy. Health. and Comfort Flavor and Economy POSTUM CEREAL gives you every desirable quality in a table beverage and has none of the harm of coffee. T i lls All-American table beverage must be boiled 20 minutes. For children and grown-ups. \ There's a Reason Two Sizes 25`t and 15 All grocers. Made by Post= Cereal Co. Battle Creek, Mich, CID PROBLEMS FACING STRICKEN WORLD Shall Chaos Or Reconstruction in Europe Follow the Great World War? CHANGE OF SOME SORT SURE Returning Soldier Feels He Has at Least Earned a Better Chance Than He Has Hitherto Been GrantA, Article III. By FRANK COltrfRFORD. Europe wears an anxious look. One thought is arousing her from the stupor of her misery. She opens her eyes in wide amazement when she no- tices and notes the striking change that has come over her children. It le puzzling her, although she well knows what they have gone through, how pa- tiently and uncomplainingly they suf- fered. It Isn't strange to her thut they have changed, when she rentembere the peace of the years before the war, the quiet, sane lives they lived, and the four years in whleh they lived in wet, foul sewers called trenches, slept in tombs on the edge of a strip of hell called No Man's Land, brenthed the smell of burning flesh, SOW their pals \go west,\ hurled their dead, grinned at pulp, laughed at death. Nerves of steel could not stand what they have gone through without being changed by its They have put on mufti again. It is strange to them. The quiet streets are dull. The demobilized soldier feels the letdown. The tenseness over de- pression sets in. During the war he didn't have time to think of anything except the job ahead of him. Every minute. every move was life or death to him. Nosy he realizes -for the first time what he has gone through. won- ders why he Is alive. Two thoughts possess his mind; one the me/o\ 1 7 of every minute of the days and nigh1s of the war—the other, of what IR ahead of him, what is he going to do with his life! He is at a strange crises - roads. The word \job\ doesn't mean much to him. It Isn't that he Is lazy. He has to pinch himself to rennet , that It Is over and that he is back front the war. Earned Right to Better Place. Between the whirr. of machine bul- lets and the' shriek of shrapnel he spent his time thinking, and hie thoughts were not all about the war. He never got used to the war, but he learned to forget It. He has brought more than souvenirs and memories from his experience, He has brought home thoughts. Ideas and ambitions from the trenches. Ninny a night, look- ing over No Man's Land, listening to the \banshee\ of the war, he thought and resolved that if he ever came hack he wanted, and would have, a better chance in this queer thing called Life. He feels (het he hes paid for a place, and he has paid. lie hes earned the right to a decent place in the world, for which he fought. He helped save the world and he looks to that world to save him from a mean- ingless machine existence. If It doesn't he has made up his mind to use force. He is willing to work, wants to work. hut he insists on being part of his work, rather than his work being n11 of him. He sees, feels and measures things from an intensely human angle. Ile feels his humanness. The war emphaelzed the value and meaning of the human being. It was life or death, lie is alive. He wants a human inter- est In his work. Hundreds of demobilized' soldiers in different parts of Europe, In different words, in different languages. !Ave said to me: \If the world ien't going to give ue a better chance than It gave is before the war, then the world wasn't worth fighting for. When we fought, they told us It was to make the world safe for democracy and to make life worth while. We thought this meant Its and ours. We have learned that life isn't only n gumption of a job and enough to eat, we want to be treated like human beings. A man wants to feel that his work means more to him than just wages. He anenda most of his time nt work, the rest of It is spent with his family and In sleeping so he will he able to work the next day. Why shouldn't he haw. an Interest In the business, and why shouldn't the business have an interest in him? We don't went to run the business, all we ask is a say In it. a friendly say In it. Some people think that to be fed Is to he free—it isn't. Reing free means being treated like a human being.\ I have found many good honeat men sad women who have lost interest in work. They say, \We don't get a fair share of what we make. We fight among ouritelvea for jobs because we have to or starve, and they pay us as little as they can.\ I am not reasoning or arguing this question: I am stating a fact which Indicates the state of mind of millions of men and women in Europe who did their bit for civilize - Wm during the past four years. Fair Hearing Must Be Granted. Calling these people boishevipts doesn't slienee them nor solve the problem. Such tactics irritate and deepen the unrest. Their grievance must be given a fair, pntient hearing. Theirattitude of mind must be reek. : oiled with if we hope to get back to uormal Hying. I have heard some - say tbat , these people what be given to un- derstand that they must work er starve. No law or government In the world is powerful enough to compel People to work. This is pet -Ocularly true of the people today. To think of using force Is foolish, suicidal. We have had enough of force during the last four years and the flit:titer we get away from the idea of beating one another into submission the better off we all shall be. The present unrest is positively daegerous. It Isn't like nay unrest we have ever' hind before. It is the restlessness of human beings who have been fnee to face with death. We need a lot of calmness and coalition sense. By kindly conference we must try to understand etude other, and by just compromise help ench other. Of one thing I am sere, and that is, If an effort is made to use blind, brute force on the working myrtle of the world, the present unrestrwill be set in mo. tioh, a whirle Ind will break upon the world. The plain, open road back to happi- ness Is co-operation. If we stop for it moment anti realize what we hut se been through, and the changes that have come upon us while we were going through it, we will flail getting to- gether ensy. Unrest blocks the road It fetters the will to work. We must face the truth, and the sooner we do, the better. The world is broke, The %lir has bankrupted Europe. One thing, and one thing only, will tiring us hack to sane, normal living. It is work Sympathy and understamling will do more to secure prime, stimulate stork than delinnee, ehnlienge and I rea A normal world Is one in WhICII Meti his - c' it liii work together in peace, where all men have a chance 10 be happy. Mix Itleallit Rh Intermit in work, a Joy in us orking—ilving to work, rather thee ustrking to live. Men lutist have food, clean whoiesome food, and enough of It to do their work without eximustion. Men must have elothes Not only the quantity and guano nec- essary to protect their bodies front the weather, but elothes that satisfy the normal Instinct for npueenring (lean anti neat. Deeent clothes sustain self- respect. Men without them are less miniml anti moral. All Need a Playtime, There must be a time between the end of the day and the beginning of sleep in which men elm n know and en- joy their famillem The man who is so used up by hip day's work Met Ile falls asleep tit his supper table Isn't play- ing fair with his wife and children. and his employer isn't 'playing fair with him. All mete are hays, even aft- er they have grimy hair. This quality Is probably the fittest end best In them. They need it play(ime. a reere- atinn time. They lose something and the world loses more when they do not get it. It Is not enough that bodies are fed, minds must not he ntarved. Light is the right of every human be- ing with eyes. Education is light. The human race nem have light. None of his were intended to five in darkness. Children are entitled to e school time, a jump -the -rope time, a top time, a play time. A child who enters manhood or womanhood without ever having known a childhood goes through life with something missing, something lost. The creed of the changed world is that while the world doesn't owe anyone a living. It is obligated to give every human being a chance to make a decent living. The new commandment Is that this chance must be given. I found these thoughts planted in the unrest in Europe. They are strong- ly. deeply rooted In the consciousness of the people. They are growing. Men and women are gertlening, cultivating. protecting these ideas. Any effort to uproot or destroy these floweting thoughts will he resented end fought by the gardeners. They are not weed thoughts—they are the blooms of hope and they belong to the poor. They will fight and die before they will see these hope growths trampled under foot. This is the only garden they have. The blood of the dead fertilized it. The living care for it. (Copyright, W • Newspaper Union) Words. - \And now,\ concluded the super ora- tor, as be bowed to the frenzied ap- plause of the common people, \if I have made any point clear to this In- telligent audience I will feel that I have failed of my purpose. However, the greatest of mortals Is prone to err, so, in justice to the great Isatie at stake, I trust that anyone who under- stands what the League of Nations really Is will ask such eueasions as will enable me to obscure sudi parts of it as may be <leer to you now.\ • • • Silent e. • • • More si- lence. • • • And then sonic. \Ah I Your silence is flattering. In- deed. If you will now dispense with shaking my hand. I will hid you adieu, as I must save my energy for the speech I an to deliver tomorrow be- fore the former munition makers on 'llow to Combat the High Cost of Living.' \—Life. Little Drops of Water. It has been stated that people are as Ignorant of the size of the sea its they are of matters dealing with astronomy. Few are aware, for Instance, that the Pacific ocean covers 08,000,000 miles; the Atlantic 80.000,000 miles. and the Indian ocean, Arctic, and Antaretic 42,000,000. To stow away the contents of the Pacific it would he necessary to fill n tank one mile long, one mile wide, and one mile deep, every day for 440 years. Put In eguree, the Pacific holds in %eight 984,000.000,000 0001,00,000 tons. The Atlantic averages a depth of not quite three miles. Its waters weigh 325,000.000.000,000,000,000 tons, and it tank to contal,n it would have each of it. tildes 430 wiles long. Reliable 'Information All American women know of the great success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in restor- ing to health women who suffered from ailments pe- culiarto theirsex, yet thereare some who are skeptical and do not realize that all that is claimed for it is absolutely true—if they did, our laboratory would not be half large enough to supply the demand, though today it is the largest in the country used for the manufacture of one particular medicine. The Facts contained In the following two letters should prove of benefit to many women : Buffalo, N. Y.—\ I suffered with organi0 inflaniniation and displace.. meat. Whoa lifting I had such pain and bearing down that I was nut able to stand up, and it hurt me to walk or go up or down stairs. I was going to a doctor without any re- sults and he said the safest thing would be to have an operation. I met a lady who told me 81,0 h ad three operations and was not well until she took Lydia E. l'inkhaiu'a Vecetable Compound. ot 'egetable Compound and I kept olt relief after taking twobottles on with It until I was cured. I ad. ways use Lydia E. lenkleun's Liver Pills anti they are fine. Everything used to turn sour on my stomach an the Liver rills relieved that.\—Mrs. A. Boozes, 03 Fargo Aveuue, Buffalo, N. Y. Sacramento, Catif.—\ I bail or- ganic trouble mei had sueli terrible pain and swelling in tho lower part of my side that could not Monti On my feet or oven lot the bed clothes touch my side. I gave up my work thinking I would not be able to go back for months. My mother ad- vised roe to take Lydia H. l'inkitam's Vegetable Compound as it had saved her life at one time, and it put toe in a wonderful condition In a couple of weeks, so I Can keep on working. I work in • department store and have to stand ou illy foot all day and I do not have any MOOS pains. I surely recommend your Vegetable Compound to all my friends and yon may use these facts as a testimon- lal.\—Inurrns. J. l'anua, 8320 DI EA. Sacramento, Calif. The fact is, the Beat Medicine for Women la measoiro No Expanse. Lnwyer—What wan the judgeS4 charge to the jury? Ex-Juryman—Net a cent. lit fact, we got pnld by the day for our work. WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND SWAMP -ROOT For many years druggists have watched with much interest the remarkable record maintained by Dr. Kilmer'. Swamp -Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder medi- cine. It is a physician's prescriptieg. Swamp -Root is a strenatheifing medi- cine. It helps the kidneys, liver and bled - der do the work nature intended they should do. Swamp -Root his stood the test of years. It is sold by all drugrtists on its merit and it should help you. No other kidney medicine has so many friends. Be sure to get Swamp -Root and start treatment at once. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv. Couldn't Be. \I sew your double on the street to- day.\ . \Times impossible, sir. I am a sin- gle 11M11.\ OLD CLOTHES DYED MAKE NEW GARMENTS -- — \Diamond Dyes\ Turn Faded, Shabby Apparel Into New. Don't worry about perfect resting. Use \Diamond Dyes,\ guaranteed to give a new. rich, fadeless color to any fabric. whether it he wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods,—dresses, blouses, storkinga, skirts, children's coats, feathere—everything! Direction Book In package tells how to diamond dye over any color, To match any material, have dealer show you \Diamond Dye\ Color Card.—Adv. Some men waste a lot of time try- ing to convince others that they are truthful. \He.Rose.\ A email hoy was mike') hy the teach- er to write tin eissny on heroes. The boy promptly wrote the follow- ing: 'I put a tin tack on the ehair. Fa- ther sot on It and ate-rose.'\ Sure Relief 6 BELL-ANS Hot water Sure Relief E LL•ANS FOR INDIGESTION Causedby Acid -Stomach That bitter heartburn, belching, food- ropeetIng. Indigestion, bloat after eating— nil are caused by acid.stornach, nut they ars only Mat symptoms—danger sIgn•la to Warn you of awful troubles if not etoPPed. 11,a , tochs, billowiness, rheumatism, eclatIca, that tired, Ilstlese feeling, lack of energy. dirrin,s, insomnia, even cancer and ulcers of the Intestines and many other allinenta are traceable to ACID -STOMACH. • \rhousands -ycs, mllilona—of people who ought to be well and strong are mere weak - :logs because of acid-atomach. They really ntArve• In the! iniehit of plenty because they n••t get enough strength and Vitality trots the food they eat. Take ICATONIC and give your stomach a chance to do its work right. Stake It strong, cool, sweet and comfortable. EATONIC brings quick relief for heartburn, belching. Indigestion and other stomach miseries. Im- proves digestion—helps you get full strength from your food. Thousand, say EATONIC Is the most wonderful stomach remedy In the world. Brought them relief when every- thing else failed. Our beet testimonial Is what EATONIC will do for you. So get • big 150c boa of EATONIC today from your druggist, use It nye days—if you're not pleased, return it and get your money beck. ATONIC CILDIAX6.tla Acm-sroseACBD W. N. U., BILLINGS, NO, 12-1920. How About YourCatarrh? Do You Want Real Relief? Then Throw Away Your Sprays . and Other Makeshift 'Treat- ment. • Why? Simply because you have overlooked the cause of catarrh, and all of your treatment has been misdirected Remove the cause of the clogged -up accumulations that choke up your air passages, and they will naturally disappear for good. But no matter how many local applications you use to tem- porarily clear them away, they will promptly re -appear until their muse is removed. S. S S is on antidote to the mil- lions of tiny Catarrh germs with which your blood is infested. A thorough course of this remedy will cleanse and purify your blood, and remove the disease germs which cause Catarrh. For free medical advice write to Chief Medical Adviser, 101 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. . •