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About The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.) 1909-1920 | View This Issue
The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.), 25 March 1920, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053199/1920-03-25/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
a THE STANFORD WORLD Instead of kalsomine or wallpaper No Package Genuine 'Without Cross and Circle Printed io Rd To eft A labartine Rerrifir You Itfurt Ark for Afabartine of Name We Hand You the Packager at Puts Health and Cheerfulness in Your Home Smoked, grimy, papered, painted or kalsomined walls are a menace to health and offensive to the discriminating housewife. Alabastine is so economical, so durable, so sanitary, so easy to mix and apply that it is universally used in securing proper wall conditions Alabastine is used in the homes, schools, churches and on all kinds of interior surfaces, whether plaster, wallboard, over painted walls, or even over old wslIpaper that is solid on the wall and not printed in aniline colors Alabastine is packed in dry powder in full five pound packages, requiring cnly pure cold water to mix, with directions on each package. You will readily appreciate the economy of Alabastifie over other methods, and remember it is used in the finest home and public buildings every- where. Be sure you get Alabastine, and if your dealer cannot or will not supply you, write direct for sample card and color designs with name of nearest dealer. New wads demand Alabastine, old wails ap- preciate Alabastine. Alabastine Company 1646 Grandville Ave. Grand Rapids, Mich. HORSES couointior ran Spohn's Distemper Compound to break It up and get them back in condition. Twenty-siz years use has made \Spohn's\ indispensable In treating Coughs and Colds, Influenza and Distemper, with their resulting compli- cations, and all diseases of the throat, nose and lunge. Acts marvelously an e. preventive, acts equally well as a cure. 60 cents and Ill.115 per bottle at drug stores. SCORN MEDICAL COMPANY. Goshen. Ind. The less a mall knows about politics the snore ringry be gets in a political argument. '93 Happy Day' sanetbe-laundress as 4ille hung the snowy wash on the line. It was a \happy day\ because she used Red Cross Ball Blue. -. Anyhow, They Saw Action. The untried anti-aircraft battery had gone into position for the first time in the Total sector. Determined, like most newcomers, not to let anything get away train It, It blazed away in- discrimlnatelti and vociferously at every speck that appeared in the .sky. After one particularly activessession its commander ran across an old friend, who asked him how the outfit was coming along. \Oh not so badly,\ answered the C. 0. without elation. \We brought down five planes the other day.\ \Five! Why, that's wonderful! \(Eighty few batteries have done that. Are you sure you got the figure •straight ?\ \Fact no doubt about it,\ replied the captain. gloomily. \One Roche rind four allied.\—The Home Sector. Kindness. When the Brazen Hussy moved Into the house next door, the \Upllfter\ said: \Of course, I can't exactly call. But if she comes out on her veranda to sit, I shall smile at her. The only way to get a hold on people like that is to he friendly.\ And the Brazen Hussy looked at the \Uplifter\ next door and said to her- self: \Poor fright! I suppose I might as well speak to her. Perhaps after n little she will let me show berheW MAO - wet' hurte.-- - = - Ltre Says an amatsur poultry fancier: \The only money in chickens is what they swallow.\ The fool politician tights friction: the wise one uses soft soap. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Beare the tillgabtnre of In Vee for Over 80 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Too Much for Her. Four -year -old Harold was going away on a visit. Ills mother had been giving him final InstructIona in table etiquette and the general impor- tance of being polite. Ills six -year -old sister listened with Increasing disdain. Finally, unable to bear It any longer, she said: \Now mother, if Harold's going up there to act a d—n sissy, I'm not go- ing.\—Home Sector. How Her Husband Felt. \Has my husband appeared to miss me during the. month I have been away, Mary?\ \Well ma'am, at first he seemed in very high spirits, but toward the end of the time he became less cheerful, and yesterday, ma'am, be was just misernble.\—New York Evening Post. A Dusty Worm. \Why don't you marry him?\ \Ile has such freakish ideas. Says he's a worm of the dust.\ \But na long AA he is a worm with the dust, what do you care?\—Boston Transcript. Work! Work! that Is toy unfailing cure for all troubles.-1.ydia Maria Virtue is almost anti -everything. Most of the commandments are \don't.\ An Invigorating `ale Beverage —a real part of the meal, not merely sornethin to drink with your foo POSTUM cat famommm, If you feel that something interferes with your health, stop' tea and cofw fee are use this popular drink. \ThereS a Reason\ No raise in price. Made .ty Foothill% Cereal Company Battle Creek., MichiSan. PROBLEMS FACING STRICKEN WORLO Shall Chaos or Reconstruction in Europe Follow the Great World War? NEW, GREAT FORCES AT WORK Demand for New Order of Things Is Universal and Reactionaries Merely Swell the Rising Tide of Discontent. Article IV. By FRANK COMERFORD. The most obvious thing In Europe Is the changed attitude of the people, and yet there are many, particularly in the conservative, employing class, who refuse to see. There are none so blind as these. While they close their eyes and minds to the obvious; the change goes on. It is not idle rhetor- ic to say that new great forces are at work. Of course you cannot see the forces any more than you can see the grass growing, but you can see the effects. You can measure the charac- ter of the forces. Everywhere I found people talking about a new Order. Men separated by hundreds of miles are thinking and talking the same ideas. It startled tne to hear the same ideas up in the Balkans that A had heard in France and England. I did not meet any one who was able to give me a clear, com- plete meaning of the phrase, but it is on the lips cf everyone. It has a meaning, and time will produce a plan. The people are forward lookifig—they are thinking, waiting for something to happen. They have faith that It will happen and that It will bring great good to the human race. Every one . seems confit cot that some great com- pensation must and will come out of the siege ot suffering through which they have passed. If they were not so er.:nest, so sane, so determined about it I should have interpreted their enthusiasm as fantasy. A meaningless minority of reaction- aries scorn and scoff at all talk of a new Order. These ore the backward - looking men of big business, the stand' patters In politics. They are out of touch with the times; they think the real world is the little circle In which they live. They are the barnacles on big business. They smugly set down all talk of change as bolshevism. Fortatiately the real' leaders of bust- - ness are breaklng away from this point of view. Progressive, human and open minded, they see and know that unrest is a problem and that It must be solved. They are paying heed to the complaints of the workers. They admit that there Is justice back of the complaints. Instead of arguing coer- cion, they are talking concession. They know a change has come, they want to meet it. New Order Must Come. A new Order will come. The one question that is bothering the minds of men who are awake to the change is, will it come through revolution or through evolution. The greatest friend of revolution is the stubborn employ- er who refuses to see the change, ac- cepts things as they are, and insists upon the use of force as the only cure for unrest. Money is a gross thing when com- pared with human life. To mention Europe's financial losses In the same breath with her dead and W011»&11, seems sordid, hut It is an everyday world and In it money has its logical place. Since the war sonic people are thinking that money has had too im- portant a place In the world. It has been charged with pushing man out of his place, but bills must be paid and Europe needs money. The war cost billions and billions of dollars. Mil- lions of men had to be clad mid shod, Winona and billions of cartridges and shells, rifles, cannons, airplanes, ships. were made. Europe owes the money. How will he pay it; where will she get it? It is a question that even the wisest and most optimistic of men In Europe hesitate to answer. Some wonder, Is there an answer? Europe has borrowed tantil her in- terest charge today is almost as large as her Whole cost of governmental ad- ministration w -as a few years ago. I heard Lloyd George say that England faced a yearly interest charge of three hundred million pounds. Another ofli- dal told me that this interest charge that England must pay each year is nearly one hundred million pounds a year larger than the cost of adminis- tration was at the time of the Boer war. Only the other day her interest was due on some loans from the United States and she Was forced to default. and our $overnment charged the in- terest to the principal and passed the day of payment on. In the meantime the pound is going down In value. When I was on the Continent it had reached $4.14. Today It is under $3.87, and steadily going down. France is in even a worse plight. The banks are loaded with government paper. She has made no provision by taxation to pay her debt. I was told on every hand that any effort to Impose a tax would bring on a revolu- tion.. It le said that ,her.. debt has reached the startling figure of $640 for every man, voman and child In the country. Wheli I left Cherbourg snil for America a regulation had een put inmo effect prohibiting mini 'me 'envies France from taking money with hitn, either metai or paper money, In excess of a thousand francs, and on that day you could buy *almost nine francs for an American dollar. Can France pay? The figures prove France insolvent. Iler officials and her men of prominence say she cannot pay. Her war debt is enormous. Poverty on Every Side. Italy is as bankriapt as France. A forced loan temporarily held the lira froiu losing all of its value. Her war debt tbreatens the throne. In the new Balkan countries we thul no gold reServe, little but poverty. In Czecho-Slovalda the government closed the borders for ten days, cotumantied the people to bring their money to the hanks where stamps were put on the Whep they brought their money they were given 50 per cent of it back and receipts for the balance. In this way time government cut down the volume pf paper money 50 per cent. Even after this was done in the city of Prague I bought kronens for less than two cents . a piece. In Poland every kind and species of paper money is in circulation. Iler frontiertiatave not been fixed by the peace aide, and the profiteers lit motley smuggling have dumped the worthless paper of Europe Into Po- land. In October I was in Warsaw and my recollection Is that the mark was worth about two cents In Amer- ican money. Poland tins, no metal money. She hasn't a gold reserve. Her struggle to get credit to keep her people from dying by the millions from hunger and cold Is pitiful. Austria Is penniless, peoverty-strtelt- en. Vienna is a city of ghosts, list- less, pepless, human beings. They drag their feet after them. Their heads are bent between their shoul- ders. The kronen was worth a cent when I was there In September, and even at Unit price there was prac- tically nothing to buy. Austria in her extremity, her people starving, peti- tioned the peace table for the priv- ilege of selling her art treasures mid heirlooms. The pletm was to exchange them for bread and coal. Necessity prompted the plea. The peace Wile refused the permission, holding that these things of value might be the only collateral out of which the al- lies could collect'the indemnity. Europe's debt Is her crown of thorns, as her dead Is her cross. Un- rest is her Calvary. A new Order Is her hope—her resurrection. Facing Gigantic Task. Europe Is not dying; she Is ex. !Amsted, tortured, confueed. She is trying to find herself. She is putting all of her remaining strength into the effort. Time task before her is stupen- dous. She must rebuild her house. She must nurse her wounded, care for her cripples. She has counted her losses, inventoried her possessions. The past must bury its dead. To - 'morrow is for the living. Today she is planning for the tomorrow. She must repair her house, put It in or- der. To understand her work, to know her plans, to feel her problem, It is necessary to know her thoughts. Unrest is frightening her. Fear is keeping her from work. It is causing her to worry. With all her soul she is pleading to the rich and powerful to become as little children again, her children. She is telling them that the fate of the family is at stake, that they must make concessions to their more unfortunate brothers. She is trying to make them understand that they are brothers. Many of them have forgotten the relationship. When she urges them to stop wrangling and quarreling she is pleading for their common good, the family welfare. She is warning againat the danger of jus- tice too long denied, of unrest too long pent up. She is translating time mut- terings and mumblinga of the discon- tented. She knows the compinint In their _hearts, she sympathizes, she un- derstands. This was Europe as 4 saw her in het - black rags arising • from the war. (Copyright, MO, Western Newspaper Union) Greatest American Humorist. On the 30th of November, in 18,'35, Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain) was born at Florida, Monroe county, Mo. Mark Twain first was a pilot on the Mississippi river. At the sgs - or twenty-seven he began his lit- erary career as city editor of a 110W8 - paper, the Enterprise, in Virginia City, Nev. Ile is the best known of Amer- ican humorists, and hisi works !Hive berm widely translated. During his life -time Mark Twain lectured n great detil In this country and in Europe. lie had a great charm of personality Amid was beloved by all who knew him. lie, died at Redding, Coon., April 21, 1910 I Shoemakers' Wax a Liquid. It Is not always poautilde to draw a very clear line of demarcation be- tween a liquid and a solid. Shoemak- er's wax, which is so„brittle that the fragmentation obtained when a sheet of it is hit by a bullet resembles that in the case of the very brittle nietal antimony, is actually st liquid. To show thls place leaden bullets upon a sheet of shoemaker's witx and then support the whole upon corks, At the end of a month the corks will be found floating upon thessheet of wax inirtead of beneath it and the bullets will be at the bottom as In a liquid. Largest Movie Hciuse. New York has In building a moving picture Meister with n seating capacity of 5,300, which may constitute it the largest of Its kind anywhere. Judging by the heavy patronage In other . such places, the new house may be filled at the chief performances. The public is seeking professional entertainment as never before. YOU'LL SOON LOOK F - OLD FROM HERE UP Let \Danderine\ check that nasty dandruff and stop hair falling, (let a small bottle of \Danderine\ at any drug store for a few cents, pour a little into your hand and rub well into the scalp with the finger tips. By morning most, if not all, of this lawful scurf will have disappeared. Two or three applications often remove every hit of dondruff and $top falling hair. Every hair on scalp shortly shows more life, vigor, brightness, thickness and color.—Adv. The Retort Courteous. Ile—Don't you try to make a fool of me. She --Not after your 'waste of be- ing ri Nett -merle man and doing Ho - job much better ilinn I could. RUB RHEUMATISM OR SORE, ACHING JOINTS Rub Pain Right Out With Smill Trial Bottle of Old \St. Jacobs Oil.\ Rheumatism is \pain\ only. Not one case In fifty requires intermit treatment. Stop drugging. Rub sooth- ing, penetrating \St. Jacobs Oil\ right Into your sore, stiff, eching joints and muscles. and relief collies instantly. \St. Jacobs Oil\ is mm harmless rhett- matfett] cure which never disrippoints and cannot burn the skin. Limber up I Quit complaining! (let a small trial bottle of old, honest \St. Jacobs 011\ at any drug store, and in jtist a moment you'll he free from rheumntie pain, soreness, stiff- ness and swelling. Don't stiffer! Re- lief awaits you. \St. Jacobs 011\ has cured millions of rheumatism sufferers in the hod half century, and Is just as good for science, neuralgia, lumbago, backache, sprnins.—Adv. Swabbing Yarnsi tiloti--You have to keep things tient Oh shipboard? (tob—lietelin 1 Serubbulously elenn. —Cartoons Magazine. 100% PEP! If Constipated, Bilious or Headachy, take \Cascarets.\ Feel bully! Be efficient! Don't stay sick, bilious, headachy, constipated. Remove the liver and bowel poison which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, your breath had and stomach sour. Why not spend n few cents for a box of Cascarele and enjoy the nicest, gentlest laxative-en- thartic you ever experienced? • Cns- carets never gripe, sicken or Incon- venience one like Snits, 011, Cniomel or harsh Pills. They work while you sleep.—Adv. Usually no more can be got for old junk thnn you would pay if you bought it. $100 Reward, $100 catarrh Is a local disease greatly Influ- enced. by constitutional conditions. It therefore requires constitutional treat- ment. HALIIS CATARRH MEDICINE I, taken Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the Aye- tem. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE destroys the foundation of the disease. give., the patient strength by Improving the general health and nssiste nature in doing Its work, $100.0) for any ease of Catarrh that HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE falls to cure. Druggist, The. Testimonials free. F. J. Cheney e t Co., Toledo, Ohio. AFTER 6 YEARS --STILL WELL Now Strong and Hearty Though Case Looked Hopeless -.i. yi....., a g o I was in nwfui eondi• t10111,' MVO E. K. Chase, 3t1 E. Cross St. Ypsilanti, Mich. \My family was told I couldn't live inure than two months. 1 was in constant pain from the uric acid and was so bad with \ ) s rheumatisin my legs I! e e Itt e d all ' 'drawn up. My ‘,.. back never • di stopped hurting, \ ' il The kidney seem - (ions were held back until only a few drops came, and I bloated un- til I thought my skin would burst. My lege were twice their normal size. \The water seemed to fill my chest end press against the heart. For three months I never moved out of the chair and I choked and gasped for breath like a ilyintlitilan. All the doctoring failed, and my weight went from 185 to 12.5 pounds. \Dootes Kidney Pills Eared my life. Eleven boxes eared me of every com- plaint. I have been well six years and tilde to work as hard as any man.\ Sworn to before toe. FLOYD E. DAGGETT, Notary Public. Get Doan's at Any Store, 60e • Bog Mt. Ulm DOAN'S PILLS FOSTER-M1LBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. r BELCHING Ciuso y Acid:Stinnach I.et EATONIC, pnnderful modarn stomach lemody. >ou quirk relief Dom disgusting tithing. food•repeatIng. Indigeatton, bloated gassy stomach, draPOP- Sia, heartburn and titer stomach miseries. They are all caused by Acid-litotusich frotn which about nine people out of ten furter In one way or another. One writes as fol- low.: \Ilefore I used I4ATONIC, t could not eat • bite without belching It right up, sour end bitter, l have not had • 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 ((Rhone' they may eat heart- ily, ()rave disorders are likely to follow If an acid -stomach Is neglected. Cirrhosis of the liver, intestinal congestion, gastritis, catarrh of the stomach—these are only • few of the many aliments often caused by Acid -Stomach. A sufferer from Catarrh of the Stomach of II years' standing writes: \I bad catarrh of the stomach for 11 long years and 1 never found anything to do ma any good—just temporary rellef—until I used ATONIC. It Is • wonderful remedy and 1 do not want to be without IL\ If you are not feeling quite right—lack energy and enthusiasm and dent know just where to locate the trouble—try EATONIC and see how tnuch better you will feel In every way. At all drug stores—a big bog for See and your money back If you are not satisfied. ATONIC CTOUWkAAIID•at MASS Vaseline Reg U. S Pat.Off arbolated PETROLEUM %JELLY A convenient, safe antiseptic far hotpe use. Invaluable for dressinA cuts and sores. A time -tried remedy. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES CIIIE1EHERG9g MFG. CO. Etats Street New Yorh Travelers Will Find a Warm Welcome at tho Hotel West MINNEAPOLIS Sitneals Prices— Service Our Watchultrd No Scarcity. s.• FRECKLES ki'' . . 11 1 -1 :mw\'\7,.,......3 1 h.,14..4.. \All time world's it stage.\ \Yep and there's no sciarcily of mon- I (Amon. artists.\ W. N. U., BILLINGS, NO. 13-1920. vgr'Y Sto is WESTERN CANADA Is as profitable as grain growing. Successes as wonderful as thcee ftnm growing wheat, oats, barley, and flax have been made In raisins Horsey, Cattle, Sheep and Hogs. Bright, sunny climate, nutrit- Anis refutes, good water, enormous fodder crops—these spell success to the farmer and stock raiser. And remember, you can buy on easy Wm, Farm Land at *15 to *30 An Acre —land equal to that which through many years has yielded from SO to 45 btishsts of wheat to th• sere—grazing land convenient to good grain farms at proportionately low prices. These lands have every rural convenience; good schools, cb arches, roads, tele- phones, etc., close to live towns and good markets. If you want to get back to the farm, or to farm on a larger scale than is possible under your present conditions, I nver,i- gate what Western 0111ted• hoe to offer you. r..,Tzjill.tet:4=Onpro7 it; Pi erpl i ro \ Ifel= g oil i t n ! \ d l'ifr e al Don, Ottawa, C;•nada, Sc W. IL BLACK, Clifford Bloch. areal Tortes. M. Dalf.I I. LUDDELAND„ Don• flock, Great Falls. moat. Canadian rinvernmont Akrnta.