The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 26, 1921, Page 3

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PAGETWO 1 a THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ; 7 Rag i i ¥ ory RUSSIA MUST BLINDED HERO | SCORES 1 wAR /EDITH GT, CLAIR SHES A,BROKEN i i i | AND PEACE ae BUTTERFLY | ! | % = a : ca - i j BE BOILED OUT | WINS HONORS ee CRIPPLED a A small dose of Dr. Caldwell’s 11 + , 5 \ Syrup Pepsin will bring | B Stude ree d G : | quick relief. | Becomes uden ni INS . } ay | ae Wet a ” Broadway Favorite of a Few i GRHER, when one gf the ‘ A niversity’ Degrees ani | children is constipated are | ‘ | H uf holarshi Years Back Is Ward | you going to give Ate first dye j < i arvard Scholarshi | : ative within reach? It is dan- ‘ | What Can Be Doné to Revive In-| B I of Charity i gerous to do so. Some have 7 ii ion i | i —_—_- i been known to rupture the dustry in Nation is Upper- adatiantea tear pach AEE (By ‘Alice Rohe) i intestines of little children. most Now | ploding German shell had doomed you New York, Oct, 26—In the Bruns- | Don t be beguiled by. the out: i to blindness, could you drive the blues wick Home at Amityville, L. L, a moth \ Side sugary Appearance.< i200 oa laway and set yourself t lish: A Fi rf ‘i * i into the formula. Calomel is Tiflis, Oct. 26—(By a staff corres-|2W#y and set yourself tio ‘accomplish with wings broken and singed with H seldom necessary; salts, - r pondent of ‘The Associated Pross)— | (PE, Scholastic wonders! futile beating against the dazzling | minerals, coal iar, never!” 4 AO eh e88, Guy Envin, soldier of France,.poet, lights of Broadway is dying. | ae are ‘ The question uppermost in the minds| scholar and optimist, has done these ‘One doesn’t have to be an oldtimer ' Unlike these, Dr: Caldwell’s of all visitors to Russia is: “What things. ‘He is the first winner of the to remember the clever dancing and | Syrup Pepsin is admirable tor ve + can be done to revive Russia’s broken | Victor. HE. Chapman scholarship at singing soubrette, Edjth St. Clair, fea- | children, as it is for grown a down economic and industrial situa-| Harvard, founded for French youths tured with “The White Cat,” “Mother i people. too. Mothers have A a ion?” The writer put that query to| Who gave promise of leadership in Goose” and “The Great Mogul.” it been giving it to children. for “ Pan a Russian-American Jew who had just | the ‘field of learning, by the father of Few women in America have had i 30 years. They know it does t befriended him during an altercation | Victor E. Chapman, ‘Harvard ’13, killed more first-page stories than this for- ' not gripe, and is free from with a Red guard over the corres-/ in action while flying over Verdun. gotten favorite, ‘For a suit brought ' narcotics. The formula is on pe ante pondent’s right to occupy a seat in a! Envin will study international law by her against a famous manager for | every package, and YOU CAN sequin ok Sa train jammed to overflowing, during | at the Harvard Law School. He is, the breach of contract thrust her into pub- | see vegetable, just a com: sue a Half the trip from Batum to Tiflis. son of a professor in a small town in licity. | bination of Egyptian Senna andy Petnin FR CHARGE sy ina: [am sll ‘ ) The friendly Jew, a high official in| Northern France, Like many, other After the trial she sought positions i other Ye heros with Pep: to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 514 the Soviet of Georgia, sent here from | youths, he spent most, of his time in vain... Then she broke both knee- ’ sin. -Use.It yoursell.and you Aonticello, Ill. Write me today. i Moscow tio carry out in some degree | seeking fun and thought study a bore. caps ina fall, | : a = | ri the latter's ‘plans, sat down in the | Two Benefits “Last year,” said Edith St. Clair, a | afi 7 % crowded compartment and talked| . “I needed Gisetpline,” he sell “and strangely changed creature in her 0 ——_—_———_————_————_—————————————— aod f about ‘Russia from his point of, view. {I got it in the army. I needed some heeled chair, from the once charm- Hae Sane? ¥ 3 Lieve A H f “Russia's got to be boiled out, that’s | great shock to arouse me to the seri- ine and graceful dancing soubrette, “a sow boys» with Theodore Roosevelt. | place of pilgrimage for thousands ' all,” he explained. “The process may | ousness of life. -I got that, too—in the friend found me in the Home for In- The old picturesque life has vanished. every, tee toy ie sale ot wh at it take 20 years but when it’s finished | World War.” cure |Medora:sleeps through the years and | Meant in the life of Roosevelt and for i fe { one. i “ a curables, penniless. i 8! y Sewn wild’ 4 Bape Ria OO A ee there’ll be but two great peoples on | ‘Envin Joined the 110th Regiment. on P ‘ “She interested her friends and dreams of other days. Schuyler Lebo, OWE Wile analsex lettin veal y. p: earth, Russians and the Americans. | the line on Nov, 1, 1913, : GUY ENVIN, Blinded French Sol-} without any, publicity, raised a tem- | who was: shot by the Indians, delivers ae M ay hile it wate We patel i And they’ Ml be as:like as twin broth- When the World ‘War came, hg took |,dier, who wins honors as scholar. porary fund. the mail; “Nitch” Kendley, who rode {it 3 nen ile it waits, grim, fantas- ‘ ers, both rich in agricultural and in/ part in the first heroic resistance to 1 “When I knew that Blanche Bates, ‘the ranges with Roosevelt as a cow- tic, magical. ie mineral wealth. the German’ hordes that poured into|few months later he succeeded in Marjorie Rambeau, Anne Sutherland, | puncher® operates the pump for the o “What Russia now/neegs is factory | Belgium. passing his examinations for the de- Wm, Courtney and others, as well as | water-tank at the railway station; an heey! i products, trained engineers. tio put! “He fought at the Marne, Aisne and |gree of Bachelor of Philosophy. TW0| several companies replied to the plea, cctogenarian called “Frenchy,” who her on her feet, to help set to work | Champagne. years later he qualified with tonor for just knowing that they remenbered unted with Roose eit and has lost his her mines and whoever gets in'on that} ,Then came Beausejour,, His com-| the desree of Licencie en Philosophie, me, was happiness. “wits, plays eribbace all day long at the ht job is bound to make big, fortunes, nianding officer called for a volunteer |and in June, 1918, he ranked first) ““mnen the Actors’ Fund’ was intev-' {Rough Riders Hotel. These three | “The next and ithmediate need of |to carry a message back to the sup- |among 80 candidates for a law degree.| ..14q in me and brought me here.” Nien aretalithatremaih ofthe gay: am Russia is education, The Soviet is|porting forces. Envin sprang for-| Then came the high honor which| "55, those who look for the ironie | gregation that once'made life a revel ’ trying. 16.00 thet... Hyery, man Ip, the | ward. t brought him to Harvard. law of contrasts, Edith St. Clair be- iat the “depot” and at Bob Pobert's : : AC Red Army, is taught to, read and-writp. Receives 30 Wounds His Ambition gan her stage career in. a play called |saloon. And yet, even in its desola- a, c/o ‘ %y But the job is a difficult one.’"Under| He climbed to the parapet just as| “I want to be able to’save enough, Round of Pleasure.” tion, as the cook of the Rough Riders : = =| : at the old regime, education was dis-|a Boche shell burst 15 feet before him, | money to enable me to travel and lec- ‘Hotel remarked, “Theve’s something ST P . EASE A; couraged, The people were exploited|and fell horribly . wounded in 30, dif-|ture to my blinded Gornredesy, he gays, ee Se ee ‘fascinating about ‘the blinkety-blank 0 DIS . i by ‘the wealthy and educated few.” ferent places. ~ | “to try tio inspire them with the same | bor for ten or fifteen miles on either lade? Hdon't know.tvhy I. stay here i ah . t This keen Russian-American told of| Months later, Envin was discharged | determination to succeed which has| side of me. The river twisted down in| , ca ee I do.” a RON ey 18 4 Coughe,colds,spasmodiccroup, ik himself and his present needs. He |from the hospital. On his breast were | inspired me. long curves between narrow bottoms oN | The truth is that the Bad Lands are} Whooping cough, la grippe and 4 i was earning a big saldry, 100,000/the Cross of the Legion of Honor, the| ‘There is a wonderful feeling of/tordered by sheer cliff walls, for the pay still the Bad Lands, except that the bronchial cough should. ryceive. 2 ) i : rubles a month, exactly one dollar at | Medaille Militaire, and the. Croix de| satisfaction in, having made a great| Bad Lands, a chaos of peaks, pla- ¥ luntenced prairics are fenced now and diate treatment, or more danger Ie 3 the present rate of exchange and|Guerre with palm. sacrifice for one’s country. ‘True, I|teaus, and ridges, rose abruptly from EDITH ST. CLAIR jon each bit of parched botfam-land a ness may result, “Don'tdelay. Urs: A enough to keep his family going for] Greatest of all, however, was a de-| cannot see many of the beauties of| the edges of, the level, tree-clad, or ph ae '“nester” has his cabin and struggling,! Foley’s Honey and Tar - x about a day. The rest, the millions of }tetmination in his agart to make good, | the world, but it is equally true that | gressy, alluyial meacows. In front of ~ ‘generally in vain, to dig a living out| undisputedly ‘the best knowa end most 4 the ranch-house veranda was a row of i rubles necessary for the other days, he made by speculation, by shrewd practices for which he would be shot if they were known. But it was cither that or starvation. His wife lay ill in Batum with malaria and a tablet of quinine, or one duse, cost 20,000 rubles and bad quality at that. Also, his only son had tuber- culosis as a result of underfeeding and: medicines at, prohibitive prices were required. though blinded! He studied the Braille system. A (By Hermann Hagedorn, in the Outlook Magazine) HISTORY AND LORE OF BAD LANDS I cannot see many of its miscues. I think I am the happiest man alive.” without practical experience and sthe packers were too canny fot him. He cottonwood trees with § leaves which quivered all day there was a breath, of air. From these trees came the far-away melan- choly cooing of mourning doves, and little owls perched) in them and called tremulously at night. In the long sum- mer afterncons we would sometimes sit on the piazza, when there was no\ work to be done, for an hour or two at a time, watching the .cattle on the lonely rolling prairie and broker lands.” To his friend Henry Cabot Lodge he wrote a few weeks later: “I heartily enjoy this life, with its perfect freedom, for,1 am very fond of hunting, and there are few sensation I prefer} to that of galloping over these rolling, limitless prairies, rifle in hand, | j.veliness, or, winding my way among the barren fantastic, ‘and grimly picturesque des. n of the soil in a region which God never ‘made for farming. The treacherous | Little Missouri is treacherous still; here and there a burning mine still sends a tenuous wisp toward the blue | sky: the buttes have lost none of their | wild magnificence; and dawn and lusk, casting long shadows acrss the icoulees, reveal the old heartrending | ‘Folks in motor cars whir through it jell in a cloud of dust and see nothing successful cough medicine on tae market. It’s wholesome and safe; co better remedy known. |. Jokn Vognue, Elverton, Ga., writes thin: “E took a most severe cold and coughed night and day. My throat-feit as though the sk.n had Tused Foley's Honey and Tar: ion began to improve at oxce and in a few daya i Was oS Woll &3 over,” FOR RENT AMERICAN LEGION HALL ! Was this man satisfied with ihe Between the prairie lands of North | #8sisted in the killing of a man from) sand-bars and the sharply channeled | erts of the so-called. Bad Lands.” but the obvious grotesquery of a few! For dances, parties, sociables. Soviet regime? Of course not. He) naxota and the prairie lands of Mon- | #™bush early in his eer in the] and strangely carved amphitheater of} The winter of 1886-7, which killed | deformed cedars by the roadside or a Kitchen ‘in connection For had worked hard for it for three y24rs, | tana there is a narrow strip of broken| Bad ‘Lands, for as one of his cow- | cliffs across the bottom opposite; | the cattle industry, in the valley of |huge slab of limestone balanced pre- her. Tel. to keep going, he hid held all sorts of | country so wild and: fantastic in its|PUBChers remarked long afterwards,| while the vultures wheeled overhead, |the Little Missouri, scattered to the | cariously on sme sharply upthrust dates call W. A. Sather. Tel. i | Jobs that required high intelligence | peauty that it seems as though some| the Marquis was a little blood- | their black shadows gliding across the ] 808. . and he considered the crowd in Mos- cow a lot of fools. Up to 1916, he had been in America, had his three automobiles and a big importing agency, owned his home in Brooklyn still, but he had been caught in the reyolution and couldn't get out. ‘So he was helping in the boiling out process. He’s goikg to stick on be- cause he can make his fortune back, ‘He hated the old aristocratic class because they tried to have everything for themselves, because theirs was a system that led to laziness, drunken- ness ahd “non-production and finally the ‘extinction of their class in the grand crash of ruinous revolution. All the good he could think td say for thé Soviet was that it had tried hard. For one thing it had knocked out alcohol. Yes, that was one if the troubles of old Russia, Too much drink, among all classes. In Georgia where we were, there was still plenty to drink but toward. Mgscow drink thinned out until none was to be had. There was lots ‘of thievery—the cor- respondent, had best look out for his pockets, and. his baggage—but to be caught stealing meant execution. Another excellent institution of the Soviet was the Red Army, yes, that was a thing. to be proud of. Discipline was fine’ It Was better than the ‘Czar’s army. Now only men up to 24 wete-enrolled. There’’were five mil- lion ‘of them—a. great force to be reckoned with. Whuld the United States come in and help Russia? This thought was uppermost in his: mind. He hoped so. ‘He wanted to get back to America for a time to get some money together. Then he would return and make his fortune. He had taken out his, first papers years ago but his business in ‘Kussia had’ prevented his taking out the second papers. His wife-was from ‘Philadelphia. Born there. So was his son, It would take $1,000 to get back to} the United States, which meant 100,000,000 rubles, Speculate as he might, he could never get together such a sum. Maybe he might arrange to be sent over on ~a commission, when ‘Moscow got the Americans to accept the trade idea. Just now he had $5 in American money—00,000 rubles—which he had given his wife as a birthday present. ‘Well, one had to make the best of things in Russia. One got used to makeshifts. He was supposed to have a private car, but it was in the repair shop and tonight he was sleeping on the floor of the car we were in. He couldn't find a seat and was giad, of | unholy demon had carved it to mock the loveliness of the creations of God. On both sides of a sinuous river rise ten thousand buttes cut into biz- arre shapes by the waters of .count- less centuries. The hand of man never dared to paint anything as those hills are painted. Olive and lavender, buff, brown, and dazzling white mingle with emerald and flaring scarlet to make a piece of savage splendor that is not without an element of the ter- [rible.- The buttes are stark and bare. Only in, the clefts are ancient cedars, starved’ and deformed. In spring there are patches of green grass, un acre here, a hundred acres there, reaching up the slopes from ‘'e level bottom-land; but there are regions where for miles and miles ao green thing grows, and all creation seems a witch’s caldron of ‘gray bubbles tongued with flame, held by some bit of black art forever in suspension That wild country is:the Bad Lands of North Dakota. The treacherous riv- er that runs through it from south to north is, the Little Missouri, and on its banks 35. years ago Theodore Roosevelt had his ranches. He came to the Bad Lands for the first time in the fall of 1883. At that tima there was a little hamlet on the west bank of the river, called Little Missouri, a ‘terrible place, which was the refuge ‘of the wicked for the whole Northwest. It was through Little Mis- souri that the “underground railway” of the horse thieves ran from the In- dian reservations in what is now South Dakota to the Canadian border. The wilderness of tangled ravines that is ithe Bad Lands furnished impenetrable |hiding-places for stolen herds of horses. No sheriff dared to penetrate it; most of the officers of the law roundabout found it safer and more profitable indeed to “go into cahoots” with the thieves. The “town” of Little Missouri died |shortly after ‘Riosevelt came to the region, when a romantic Frenchman {named Antoine de Vallambrosa, Mar- }auis de Mores, founded a town of his own on the opposite bank and named it, Medora, after his wife. There the rash and hot-blooded nobleman built a great packing plant. He had,an idea that by slaughtering cattle on. the range he could crowd .the Chicago meat packers out of the Northwest. ‘He spent untold sums of money, arid failed, after all, for he was a dreamer thirsty now and then;” and he chal- lenged Roosevelt to a duel ion one occasion, but when Roosevelt chose as the weapons Winchesters at twelve paces the Marquis backed down as gracefully as he could. “Roosevelt: had two ranches on the banks of the Little Missouri—the Chimney Butte, popularly known as the ‘Maltese Cross, situated seven miles south of Medora, and Elkhorn Ranch, some 28 miles north. At the Chimney Butte, Sylvane Ferris and A. 'W. Merrifield, two stalwart Canadians, were his foremen; and at Elkhorn he had two backwoodsmen, from Maine in charge, William W. Sewall, still hale today at 77, and Wilmot Dow.’ He “ran” some 3,500 head of cattle on his two. ranges, and was ,on the way to making a moderate fortune when the devastating winter of 1886-7 déescend- ed urn the Bad Lands and practically destroyed the cattle industry there. Roosevelt lost more than half his herd. What remained he “ran on shares” for ten years longer; but he never recovered the money he had lost. The things which Roosevelt gained in the Bad Lands, however, were in- comparably more valuable to him than dollars. He gained the robust consti- tution which did him valiant service in more than one 6éxacting political campaign; and, even more important, he gained an understanding of the psychology of the common man,,which gave him an extraordinary advantage in public life over men who had view- ed humanity all their lives through plate-glass windows. The ‘Bad Lands, have countless points of association with Roosevelt. His ranch-houses are both gone, but the sites are clearly marked, and in the case of ‘Elkhorn, at “least, the heavy foundation stones, set by the strong arms of Sewall and Dow, are still in place, The trees that shaded the ranch-house still stand. The Lit- tle Missouri flows silently’ past, be- neath high banks; there is no lovelier spot in the Bad Lands. “The ranch-house,” Roosevelt says in his “Autobiography,” “stood on the brink of a low bluff overlooking the broad, shallow bed of the Little Mis- souri, through which at, most: seasons. there ran only a trickle of while in time of.freshet it was filled brimful with the boiling, auming, muddy. torrent. There was no neigh- water, glaring white of ‘the dry river bed. Sometimes from’ the ranch we saw deer, and once When we needed meat I shot one across the river as I stood on the piazza. In the winter, in the days of iron cold, ‘when everything was write under*the*Snow,”the river lay in its bed fixed and immovable as a bar of bent steel, and then at night wolves and lynxes traveled up and down it as if it had been a highway passing in front of the ranch-house. Often in the late fall or early winter, after a hard.day’s hunting, or when returning from one of the winter lino camps, we did not reach the ranch until hours after sunset; and after the weary tramping in the cold it was a keen pleasure to catch the first red gleam’ of the,fire-lit windows across the snowy wastes.” The site of the Chimney Butte ranch has none of the enticing charm ofthe green bottom where Elkhorn used to be, but the hong sage-brush flat, sloping on the east in green mea- dows to the gray buttes, and on the west running Ievel to the cottonwoods on the river bank, has a quiet beauty rot its own. A mile to the north of the Maltese Cross Bottom is Picket Butte, at whose base Custer camped on his ill- fated expedition to the Little. Big Horn. It wds a favorite bottom for round-ups in Roosevelt’s day, A mile or two tio the south is the flat which was the scene of the stampede, graph: ically descrihed by Roosevelt in his “Autobiography.” The cut-bank over which he plunged in the darkness that night is, unchanged. Roosevelt had a great love for tie wild country, where, in a very real sense, he. first “found himself.” “I grow very fond of this place.” he wrote his sister, Anna, in June, 1884, in a hitherto unpublished letter, “and it certainly has a desolate, grim beau- ty of its own, that has a curious fas- cination for me. The grassy, scantily wooded bottoms through which the winding river flows are bounded by bare jagged, buttes; their fantastic shapes and. sharp, steep edges throw the most curious shadows, under’ the cloudless, glaring sky; and at evening 1 love to sit out in front of the hut and see their hard, gray outlines gra¢ - ually grow soft and ‘purple as the flaming sunset by degrees softens and dies away; while my days I spend ‘generally alone, riding: through the VINCENT ‘ASTOR’S LUXURIOUS COW BARN nee four winds the hardy men who were |arm of rock. The region should be a Mystery Cake | Can you name it). Here is another new Royal Cake, so delicious and appetizing that we have been unable to give, it a name that does justice to its unusual qualities. It can be made just right only with Royal Baking Powder. Will you make it ‘and name it? $500 for thié \ For the name'selec! we will pay $250. For the sec- ond, third, fourth, and fifth ted as best, How to make it . the floor space. Thousands had been | ; A measu Il materials left at the station in Batum, waiting | choice, we will pay $100, $75, Use lrgk mpaznrements for ah trie for Spother. train. | A cup shortening 3 | : $50, and $25 respectively. . Tf clos ugar : ———————— | 4 cups flour . 4 Anyone may enter the contest, , 4 taxpoons Royal Baking Powder but only one name person will be considered. from each Cream shortening. beaten egg yolks.” Sift together flour, cup Myuates (135 02s.) of Uy weer charclac (mcleed) teaspoon salt Add sugar and ¢- range tind. Add * Royal Baking All names must be received by ! December 15th, 1921. In case of ties, the full amount of the prize will be given to each tying con- testant. Do not send your cake. Simply send the name you sug- gest, with your own name and. address, to the Powder and add alternately with the i lastly fold in one beater cag white. Divide batter into two parts. To one part add the chocolate. Put by tablespoonfuls, alternating dark and light batter, into three greased layer cake pans. Bake in moderate oven 20 minutes. ‘ FILLING AND ICING 3 tablespoons melted butter 2 tablespoons orange juice 3 cups confectioner’s sugar Legg white {Powdered sugarmay be used but 3 squares (3 ozs.) does not make as smooth icing) unsweetened chocolate Grated rind of #4 orange and pulp of 1 orange « Put butter, sugar, orange juice and rind into bowl. Cut pulp from orange, removing skin and seeds, andadd. Beatall together until smooth. Fold in beaten egg white. Spread this icing on layer used for top of cake. While icing is soft, sprinkle with unsweetened chocolate shaved in fine pieces with sharp knife (use 4 square). To remaining icing add 214 squares unsweetened chocolate which has been melted. Spread this thickly between layers and on sides of cake. You're bilious! Take “Cascarets” to- night to thoroughly clean your bowels of the constipation poison which is} keeping you dizzy, headachy, half-sick and upset. No other cathartic or r , physic is so pleasant or moves clog- Vincent Astor has provided well for the comfort of his Jersey cows at-“Ferncliff,” his New York country estate. ged-up bowels so nicely, 90 fully; and | Tiled walls, ceiling and floor. Porcelain troughs. Big. windows. . Electric. lights. Electrically distributed steam Cascarets cost only ten “tents: a box.-#heat is forced through holes in the ceiling; down “over*th» backs” of the cows — just like the sun’s warmth. They ? ce Adv. | are milked by hand. ROYAL BAKING POWDER COMPANY 120 William Street, New York ec es obama

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