The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 23, 1923, Page 2

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or ALONE LOUISE of ears wthout attracting | * mue on. People have~had nore important things te think = about. But now more lightsome | topies find room for discussion, or = the end of some woman’s ch tor | happiness will revive memories of | the “benutiful princess” who, # score | * of 2 for! _ ering. the offer of a casual Ameri- ~ Countess Montignoso. © ties PAGE TWO FACESOLD AGE. AND POVERTY German Princess, Once En- | d Beauty of Germany, | Not to be Envied VOT REMEMBERED| Attempted to Write Opera | But Failed—Attempts Fu- ture of Common Folk Switzerland, Oct. pades of e royal ladies in the days before the | s in some cases and in | » pur- | Montreux, ro just plain scandals, ha’ sued thei less thorny paths | more or | nyo, left the beaten tracks | 1 tangent looking for | and went off a love in a cottag Today the rate of exchange on Ger- man marks is showing up as a big | tor in the final chapters of the | es of more than one such woman. So long us marks were good, the al- Jowances paid by generous families anxious to preserve what was left of | the ancestral name, sufficed for com- ble—and quiet living at some But the in- 1 $10,000 Italian watering plac come in marks that ¢ or $16,000 a year a dozen years ago is now no more than a few frans month, So Louise of Saxe-Coburg- Gotha, in a Paris hotel, is cnsid- can acquaintance to give her the | money to pay the funeral expenses of Ker count, Geza Mattitich, and Louise of Saxony, actually in penury on a beggarly stipend is described as | “@ little old woman, in great physi- | cal misery, spending most of her days in prayer in a bare chapel.” Not Remembered. Two years ago an elderly woman, calling aerself Matame Toselli_ rent- ed a little aouse nzar Montroux. No one then remembered her av Louise, | Crown Princess of Saxony. or as the | {t was only when she asked the Saxony authori~ to increase her allowance, marks, that her identity be known, No increase was granted, | and the income that in 1912 gave | this woman $10,000 a year, now amounts to less than 20 cents a day. Her brother, at one time Archduke Leopold of Austria, is now plain Leo- | pold Woelfing, a Swiss citizen. He | was compelled last year to seek pau- per’s aid in Regensburg. Louise of Saxony, whose husband later became the Saxon King, found court life dull in 1902, and ran away with Andre Giron, the tutor of her children, of whom she had six. They went to Geneva, where the princess said t&e royal rank of the crown) prince, her husband, did not make up | for his royal stupidity. Giron did not last. The princess’ friends said he was only a means to an end, liberty. Saxony gave her an allowance, the title of Countess Mon- tignoso, and let her go. But for years there was a bickering over the chil- dren particularly the baby, Princess Anna Pia Monica, Lived In England. Louis lived in England, with fre- quent visits to the winter resorts of Italy. She met an Italian pianist named Enrico Toselli. Music was a| bond between them, and she married Toselli in London in 1907. She was then 37 years old and he was 24, Re- ferring to her earlier life Louise then said: “Now my future is going to be happy as plain Madame Toselli.” | But this Louise was not so fortu- | nate Louise of Saxe-Coburg- Gotha, who could sy. the other day -in Paris, referring to her husband: “I have lost him who was the whole world to me.” Five years after the London marriage the Saxon Louise was estranged from her musical hus- band, and they were quarreling about their only child, a boy. _ Louise displayed her musical abil- ity by writing an opera, “The Bizarre Princess,” which failed, however, to do what she most wanted, bring in a little money. Also she published an autobiography in 1911 in which she treated some of her relatives with- out gloves. During the war Madame Toselli was | lost to the public view. Now shg has emerged again in this cottage at| Montreux, 52 years old living in sor- row -and poverty, trying to raise | money, spending most of her time in WHY THAT lee | Roosevelt”, the latest life of our most prayer, thinking of the days when her bold escapades created 6ne of the greatest scandals in the ¢ourts of Europe. Me Bene Tractors Fail experienced in unloading’ them from WEN MAE UOLHES ROERD om i T HOUSE, RESTORED BIRTHPLAC i T 208 ST NEW YORK. ROOSEVELT, 26 EAS That Theodore Roosevelt po.sessed a width of intellectual range equalled by no English statesman in centuries js the judgment pronounced by a British peer, Lord Charnwood, bi ographer of Lincoln, This estimate, coming. from a foreign source which claims the interest of Colonel Roose- welt’s countrymen, is found in Lord Charnwood’s biography “Theodore d a Pp ‘versatile President, just published. ‘The first copy of Lord Charnwood’s ‘book was presented to the library of ‘Roosevelt House, the birthplace of "Theodore Roosevelt, restored by the 3Woman’s Roosevelt Memorial Asso- ‘ciationy % “Certainly, in this Island (Great Britain) where statesmanship has Jong been associated with scholarly attainments,” says Lord Charnwood, Mno statesman for genturies has bad a e bi ———— To Displace Dogs In Arctic Regions Copenhagen, Oct. 23.—Dog teams still hold the leadipg position as a means of conveyance in the frozen ; a certain type of power trac- been tried in their stead but found nting, in the opinion of Lange Koch, the Danish explorer, who has just returned to Copenhag- en after experimenting in northern Greenland with the machines: It is almost impossible to substitute self- small motor schooner in July, 1920, and by the following March had built a base 125 miles north of Thule, in latitude 78 north. The first difficulty with the tractors was boat and getting them on inland In 12 inches of snow up a slight incline, but at a very slow speed the tractgrs dragged a load consisting of nine barrels of, petrol, a barrel of oil, a barrel of benzine, tent materials, ete. It is therefore necessary for the tractor to drag great weights which wonsist mainly of its own fuel and oil. While the motor worked very well at thirty ‘degrees below zero, considerable difficulty was ex- perienced at ‘lower temperatures, and finally it was ngcessary to aban- don’ the use of the tractors entirely, as they held up the progress of the expedition and showed signs of wear- ing out quickly. The Koch as a scienti tion and in the edition was organized ic and mapping expedi- this capacity was emin- ently sWecessful. \ Teachers To andan in ’24 Dickinson, “gt” 28¢—Mandar was chosen as the meeting piace for the 1924 meeting of the Southwestern Division of the N. D. Educational as- sociation which cloged the 1923 meet- ing Saturday at Dickinson. There wag, no other. opposition, to the se- jection, Mandan was nontinated and the vote was unanimous, i The, presidency for the conting year - also went to. Morton county wher County Superintendent: H. K. Jensen LAME BACK? \ That sharp pains when bending or lifting, make work a burdery and rest im- possible. Don’t be handicapped by a bad ba look to your kidney: will make no mistake by following this Biamarck-resident’s example. Mrs. H. Steinmetz, 118 Second St., sayst, “I used a couple of boxes of Doan’s Kidney Pills from the Len- hart Drug Co., and they cured me of a, severe dull aching through . the small of my back. I had been annoy- ed for some time ‘with a Iemeness and Soreness through my loins and a tired, languid feeling and got no relief<:until..I used Doan’s ‘Kidney Pills, Ushaven't had backache and my bret hy have ince.” morning lameness—thost | way, superintendem> at Taylo was chosen for the office. The other officers are: Vice president, Max i. sec- retary, Miss Constance Teiger, Gold- en. Valley; treasurer, H. H. Maxwell, New England. State association of- ficers' are:™ vice sident, from the Ksouthwebtern district, H; O. Pippin, superintendent... of ,’tqrk ‘!county> tate.teachers, welfare Yommitteeman, , E, Pangons, superintendent, of schools at, Killdetr;, resolutions com: mitteeman, Superintendent. P. Berg; Dickinson; legislative eommit- teem: . it 5 Cte Balen ees his width of intellectyal range.” may be lacking in a man of, geniu Charnwood’s boo be in vossible to statesman in the world s remarkable or more pure. just cides, in summing up. He adds: “A Career in office comparable, in} democratic ideals. ADD MALAY ~ © ‘Expedition Returns expedition of the Field Museum of Natural History has returned with more than 3,000 new specimens for complete Oriental display in exist- ence. in leadership of Dr. Fay-Gooper Cole. It explored the mountain jungles of the Malay Peninsula and brought out full collections showing the life of the pygmies and other wild tribes which regions. to the: center of Borfleo to study { “He had such varitd and extraor- inary powers (powers some of which 4 any yea have be by $s may perhaps never jossessed in combination other man,” is another striking tribute | the from the noted British wy) er. He Another estimate found: in Lord is: h he passed on, s such that, looking rs at ieast. it would tribute tg any other 38 more ‘The work ecomplishea. wi we yy ion “He was a man of splendid justice, verlastingly in action—of splendid tice, and with a gift of all/em- racing sympathy,” this Britain de- the th cal po’ ye EXHIBITS TO FIELD MUSEUM From ‘Malay Region Ladened With Treasureres Oct. thi Chicago, 2: The Malayan m The expedition spent 16 months the {Malay region, under the is! inhabit those little |known The party penetrated also a For saving the lives of persons trapped in burning buildings, a long, silk tube, inclosed in strong netting, has a At Left: Bottom “by Grip Right: been designed. Attached to b window the victims may dive through it to safety. - Firemen in the street control | 8. its record of solid achievement to thay of any great Minister for a hundred Before beginning his work Lord Charnwood requested the Roosevelt Memorial Association to send him all easily accessible, but that he war.ted to know the worst that had-been said about the man whose biography he nished a great mass of material, which Charnwood’s high estimate of Roose- velt. The book Lincoln,” basis of John Drinkwater’s famous drama of the Great Emancipator, and ‘ which placed the British peer among Dyaks. ‘Among from the interior of Borneo is tion a number of slaves were sacri- ficed and “fed” to the image and, until was made to it each year. moval was accompanied by a festival and spirit, who is henceforth to dwell in brass work, jewelry, wood carving, embroideries, and weaving in gold and sflver thread, batik work and weapons, museum’s collectio What the World Is- Doing CAS SEEN BY POPULAR cMECHANICS cMAGAZINE ‘Fire Victims to Slide Through Silk Tubes seed of the falling body by holding taut.or loosening of the net. Through Silk Tube from ‘Window; Centet: Men at reves ong | : © § 5] 8) 1 hy NATIONS NEWEST LANDMARK ahd MUSEUM) ence if the mind is not distracted | ne is ET I bynes. ssi sie ; 7 aad 2, Do not try for oratorical rs past.” anti-Roosevelt material available, | j added that favorable material was- i to write. The Association furs in no wise abated Lord a worthy compan- of Lord Charnwood’s “Abraham which was:the reference foremost interpreters of American @ customs of the head-hunting other trophies brought rved ten-foot pole represéating a werful chief who died about 40 ars ago. At the time of its erec- a similar sacrifice Its re- recently, sacrifices ‘to the ancestral e Field Museum. Rich collections of silver, gold and were obtained from the ore advanged Maday peopled of the Federated Malay States, Sumatra and Java, while an interesting and sae gnnehi nee e self-\ the extensive collections now on} valuable colleetion was’ obtained Propelled machinery for dogs, Me) oxhipit in the institution. Officals| trom the Bathly of North Central The party left Copenhagen in a of the museum announce the most} Sumatra. The Batak are_a powerful pagan people just emerging from cannibal- m, and the collection shows many grewsome reminders. of that, period. ‘Idols fitted with compartments for the reception of human brains, ma- gician’s and made powerful by the sacrifice of captives, magical, charm . books, and huge house carvings make up staffs elaborately carved part of this addition to the the bag at the bottom In 9 tecent test, firemen THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE T.R.” Lauded As Foremost Statesman |BURT TELLS By British Peer, Biog Spent 40 Years ‘in Listening how to talk? y others Burt, formerly official stenograph-| a little talking for himself. dents, } one more easily reflected than in his expression, you may ‘pessess by slovenliness in contact between speaker and audi- use the with just the right shading of mean-| at the farthest point but do not raise M have all your cards on the Else it will grow restless. the right time. be lightened by ‘the telling of a good cover,” says Burt, “was usually takes two men to get hm. have ever covered was Lord Bryce. course was in a Harrison was a solemn, speaker—and so is Kinley was an absolute the Cleveland only once. uscript with him, and read from it. I do clearly. the. scholar.” Burt believes, are poor speakers un- les they watch out for the common weaknesses which mark most specch. ly,” he adds, “but made. a. peak 7,000 feet high, in the Low- er Engadine, has been decapitated by_an eartfiquake. Wesigiered the Japan earthquake shoc! it also reported, slight Make Explosive from Savdust ordinary sawdust replaces the nitro- glycerin used in most high explosives, has recently een announced by the spoon abe snaimatys Nadie 10 HIT HOME Before Attempting to Talk to Others NEA Service Staff Writer Boston, Oct. 23—Do you know Few do—properly. That's, the conclusion of 2 ecome the country’s most Fer more than 40 it’s been his business to hear talk. And,now, Frank H. si x of the Superior Court, finally does He has listened to seven presi- lords, dukes, innurherable tutesmen, counts, lawye profes- sors: politicians and speakers of alll; kinds and he passes on this ti “In no way is the personality of speech, Watch Your Words % “Watch your words; watch your Don’t spoil the - peech.” Here are his rules for properly de-! ivery: ‘ | Speak without notes if possible. | asier to establigh that persnoal , 1 It is Straightforwardness in 3 the most direct way to the + of your audience. latch your diction. Try to right word in the right place ng. 4, Do no shout. Aim your voice t above that. 6. Be sincere in what you say. ake your atdience feel that you table. 6. Tell an appropriate story at Even a sermon can tory. “The hardest person I ever had to Billy Sun He talks so fast that it is al- t impossible to follow him. It “The most arming speaker 1) “Of the presidents, Roosevelt, of class by himself. impressive Cvolidge. Me- master of talk, I heard He had a man- subject of his charm |; not remember Hayes very And Wilson, of course, was But presidents, like the rest of us, “They are not born orators, usual- “And so can anyone be- “If he just watches ou QAKE VISITS ALPS Geneva, Oct. *23.—Mount Gallo, When the Zuirch bservatory ghocks in the Canton of Grisons, in’ SwWitzerland. Alpinists from Malo§a who recently climbed Mount Gallo found that its top, a huge granite block, undermined by deep ¢revices, had fellen into a ravine several thousand, feet below. A new explosive compound in which Teaped from a third- story window, and a\young. woman pl head-first through forty-4oot tube. Invented by poem ate : Start of Plunge Controlling Speed ‘on the Net Ce A Blide to Saf various lengths to be Yeatened to in » building several stories high. chemistry department of the Univer- sity, of Washington. It is estimated the explosive can be made to sell that at about one-third the cost of commer- cial dynamite, as neither the am- monium nitrate, which forms 80 per cent of the mixture, nor the sawdust making up‘the balance, is an expensive mate- rial; It. is ‘claimed to be, practically jamokeless and that thefumes do not cause physical inconvenience to the user;,that it can-Only be exploded’ detonation, that it does not require thawing, and does not burn readily. eee Auto Emergency Headlights When the headlights of an automo- Jone better still, by means of an extra length | of per] can be connected to both headlamps, in parallel, It is a good igea to be prepared to meet emiergen- land German-Austro offensives, bile are “‘outgof commission,” owing t. | * ORTHERN BAPTISTS“ ghout the country will engage in a ; reat missionary moventent ‘during the next two months, during which many thousand members of. the ‘denomination will wear the little blue ‘and white buttons shown in the accom- anying picture. -; F Theet fatione signify the registra- ‘tion of their wearers in a nation-wide series of Bible and Missionary Con- ferences, as an outgrowth of which ‘the denomination hopes for a great ‘revival of evangelism. Conferences will be held during October and No- ‘vember in thirty-five large cities in’ ‘the United States, chosen as centers ‘for this work. ‘Leaders expect that ‘from these centers a wave of mis- onary spirit will go forth that will ‘not only reach the most remote of the ‘9034 Northern Baptist Churches in ‘the United States, and the most dis- tant of the 1,500,000 members of the denomination, but also spread around tion and around the world. e t ti P} PI Love At First Sight Marked Royal Romance Brussels, Oct 23—The enkagement | of Prince Humbert of Piedmont, heir to the throne of Italy, to Princess | Marie Jose of Belgium, which is to} be officially announced November 4,} is the culmination of a love match | of long standing. In 1916, Queen Elizabeth’ of Bel- gium, desirous of placing the little princess—she was then 12 years old— outside the range of airplane raids and big guns continuously shelling La Panne, where the Belgian royal family had-their modest war home, took her daughter to Florence, when under private teachers she studied English and Italian. Queen Elizabeth, accompanied by, the Princess, spent the 1917 vacation! at Venice. There, under the constant menace lof Austrian airplahe raids the Prince, a youth in a sailor’s costume, and the Princess, wearing a plain white dress, met for thé first time. It was love at first sight. ' When Prince Humbert visited Bel- gium last year there were many who noted that although the tour was sup- posed to be officially conducted, the cir to the throne of Italy preferred the company of the Princess, now a beautiful young woman, to receptions and listening to addresses by Burgo- masters. The engagement has popularly reveived herd ti been very Stock Shipments Heavy in Slope Co. Marmiarth, Oct. 28—That stock shipments have been exceedingly heavy this fall has been largely ac- counted for by the high priccs at which sheep are holding, as about half of the shipments being made over the Milwaukee road ‘are of sheep. Only such cattle as have rounded out in splendid condition are being shipped except in cases where it is absolutely necessary to reduce the.herds in order to realize a little cagh. Three-hundre and three carloads of stock about evenly divided he- tween cattle and sheep were fed, and watered at the local stock yards dur- ing the week of October 7th to Octo- ber 15th, Idgho and Washington lambs average about 85 pounds each, while, Montana and Dakota lambs average about 70 pounds. Cattle are not in as good condition as in past years ‘owing to the extremely wet fall season, which has kept the Mrs. Addie Hottell- Beauty is But Skin Dcep And Good Blood is Beneath Bo‘h Minneapolis, Minn—“I want. to JA} Golden: Medical .| make this. public jon of what Dr. Pierce’s medicines have done for the. Some years I wag,in a weak, run-down— condition W: neither strength nor ambition. A neighbor suggested that I take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. 1 secur- ed a bottlé from the drug store and this yas 90 helpful that I had no neéd ‘bf » second bottle. To those whose condition needs building up I can &nd.do recommend Dr. Pi ee > Discovery’ 11 Buchs 5 anan St, for evangelization as never before,’’ denominational leaders deglare. ‘The wars, quakes, and labor troubles at home and abroad have left humanity ready ment has come.’? a tata a her ‘across the Border, by just a week, Mrs. Catherine Feickert died Friday morning following as illness of three weeks; death being due to complica- oe | @UESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1925 BAPTISTS LAUNCH WORLD-WIDE MISSIONARY MOVE rapher of Lincoln SPRAKERS HOW 2 = Dr. John Y. Aitchison, General Ditector of the General Board of Premotion of the Northetn Baptist Convention, has appointed the Rev. W. H. Bowler, secretary of Field Activities of the -Northern Baptist Convention, as national leader in the Bible and Missionary Conferences. Thirty-five picke@ men will work under Mr. Bowler’s direction as con-. ference secretaries in the varioug cen- ters. Their work will be supplemented by that of Northern Baptist pastors throughout the nation, as well as by that of committees of business men, Baptist women, young people and other church groups. Contests will be engaged in between groups, churches, and even cities/to secure the largest possible number of registrations. Missionaries direct from foreign fields will’ present -vivid pictures of spiritual conditions in far lands, while home missionaries urge the evangelis- tie needs of various groups in the United States, age and had been a_ resident of Jamestown since December 1885 when she, with her husband, came from Scotland, South Dakota. REGISTERED assy «The world is ready and waiting vents of the past few years, such as revolutions, famines, earth- ‘o turn to things of the spirif.. The ime for a great missionary move- rairie grass too greet for fattening urposes. DIES WEEK AFTER HUSBAND Jamestown, Oct. _ 23.—Following husband, Gottlieb Feickert, , Beulah Lignite Coal is Best. $4.75 per ton. Order now. Wachter Transfer Co. Phone ¢ 62. ¢ ions. Mrs. Feickert was 60 years of Remember? It. isn’t: such a far stretch for memory to recall the day when you had to wait for a long, clear, cold spell of weather before you could Jhave sausage. Today? No wait for weather or seasons. Just telephone your meat dealer. The delightful tang of October days is made more zestful by a breakfast of Brookfield sausage, made from the , Choicest morsels of carefully selected pork, blended with spices. : ; That is but one of the services “that Swift &-Company renders— making available to you numerous products of the highest quality, when, where, and as you wish them. ‘ This has been made possible by the development, during more than a half century of service, of 23 packing plants adjacent to the best producing centers, hundréds of branch distrib- uting houses, one of them near you, and several thousand refrigerator cars which carry the meat to your dealer Volume production enables - Swift & Company to offer you this service at an average profit from all sources of only a fraction of a cent / 2 Aw’ ) * Swift &

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