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THURSDAY, MAY 22, 1919. pid Men not only| titled’ to have, what is’ there.to: pre- | tlick's cast! becoming . ver the, castle and a ft sSbul they have | vent him from: becomf 2 some. 2-00 Saltaire Re SOCIETY MENACE How. many have formed any. clear-|..We have heard much about Social- fomettiee iéonittols, that; they agar lnstheresto seals Ea eo et uuen caateees ate ay i Hee ae IS LAID BARE cut idea Of what Socialism really {s,|ism as a force for peace. Why? Not have fe hee dislikes, ap-| whispering’ that dissatisfaction to “ - - i Ke y &/and what it proposes to do? It may] because «the Socialist is opposed to petitites and des{res purposes and am jothers? What is there to. prevent bt % be we want Socialism, that we want] bloodshed aiid destruction. He be-] bitions, ‘all of which have to do with|him from rising up against the new (Contit.ued trom Page One.) the changes it will brifig about, Very|Heves in both, when-they can be made | men’s activities, and which have never| system as he dods against the present in all the relations of life.” Again the| good; but let us at least try to under-/of advantage to himself. Victor Ber-| yet submitted. to absolute control.”|one? In spite of all its tair prom- answer of the French magistrate} Stand it. Then it we want it, let ws} ger, now! on trial ‘for sedition—with | But even-if all-were willing to, submit|ises, what security for stability::amt/ rd. ein ‘place. “AML suéli defini | 82¥ 80 intelligently; if we find trat}100,000° votes Vehind him—advfses|to take: thelr -places ina vast. ma-|permanence can Socialism afford? ff v ft s Iwe do not want it, let-us say so-in-| every. workingman to keepa rifle atid chine, uponwwhat. principle w! the! there shall. exist tho possibility of dis- thons, however, are vague as vapor.!telligently and decisively, Otherwise] the necessary rounds’df ammunition | new community. undertake “to .deter-|content, that possidility may “prove, How are the ations to be em }ave shall be like the old woman inthe} to back up his ‘Hallots, The Bolyie-| tine the place ‘of, ihe ‘individual and] as it does sometimes. today, the germ story, who “dreamed she was awake, | vile ‘Socialists’ in’ Russia. have ‘been | assign him’ his, work? .. Who. ‘will: be} of distaster; and some future Gibbon A = 3 Where Knowledge Means Dollars SOCIALISM AS | Jesus and Socialism; He never heard | of it.” Not Force for Peac why, he objects to everything military. bodied? How is the brotherhood to} ve ats a jit; and awoke up to tind herself asleep,’ dioting in an orgle of. Massacre, com-| appointéd to inake the déeision?Up-| might chronicle, the “decline and fall” be realized? Schoonmaker tle nearer when he tion as opposed to individual effor But then there are many forms ot} y mass action which stop far short of | Socialist 0 to be noted | the obj Where Party Differs. pared ‘with which the French réevolu-]on what principle will 1He_1 d of ‘the Socialistic state. 1 want to call to your attention just] tion ‘was: but a pingle blood-spot’ on his work be assigned? Prof. Varsons een nee now to this one thing in which tha} the page of history. «Will they ‘do leds | Admits. that an equal ‘division. of all! DUTCH SOCIETY REFUSES y differs trom all others; [here than they- have dene in: Rusala,| the préducts of labor must waits even | TO MEET HOHENZOLLERNS 4D) ENZOLL ie t of its organization, if they and thelr sympathizers—and |after. Socialism: ts introduced. If. not Socialism, There a : . i" 3 Y . among the churches and clergy the} Democrats and Kepublicans strive Mr. Berger says that,all Sociajiats are | équal, ‘then will, ndt: some get anore |. , pli 6 ¥ . debe pes ifees wise growth of what is PhGWi as Christ for control’ of the government, het] pro-Bolshevik today—éevér becdme sut-|than others, Just as they do. toilay Muy 1922Duten — so- At’ times invovery pusiness the ee ii eeoines lols that they may overturn it or use” it] ficlently, strong to “start their revolu-| But 1 adn told ‘that the d alety «RAs. apRNAMIS CUE! kaleee dom of expansion, or the advisability 0 for purposes that its founders never | tion? beh ob thse ay G1) MHD be Made according: to exch man’s! dint itinck “Aivitea hig: bhae some other action may be governed by existing conditions, Outside influeyces in the world of comimerce intay have either adverse or favorable effect upon us the first Sociali Mr. John ‘y waxe nant as his debonair ner .will permit and t : a intended; but avowedly, at least, that} What do the vast gatherings in New| Work. Bub still tipon what principle?) jog y “| they may give a wise and just admtt| York and* Chicago, where ‘the redfap| What. is to bé the standard: dy Whied | nisin “Nothing | istration, reform abuses, and guideyhe | is lifted, mean? What did the déflance | the community.decides; If 1 man shall tt 1 an he thinks ‘he is ‘en could be lier, more inept, than | destinies of the people, ‘Their diffet | of Sherif! Langum and of Governor] Ba What is called ‘Christian Socialism | enees' are largely difvérences. of policy, | Burnquist ‘mean in ‘our’ ‘own -clty “a your business. Selfishii and graft “may often \i-| short time ago?) What «do. our. Min- ‘ 3 To best inform yourself upon these * * * There is no relation between | * 2 7 a * ‘ =~ : lterfere, But the Socialist is tlie only neapolis aldermén’ mean who ‘bar tie} * A = | party which usks to be put fnto on] way to an ordinance forbidding the|. ou cw 9 eed Not 7 AT Tene ‘trol of the machinery of government|¥ed flag of murder and anarchy to be . CORN, CALLUSES that they: may’ wreck i 1 say. this dlaplayea Le eed ‘if paki: aia ‘ eM y advisedly; Yor ‘thé co-operative com:}\ The Socialist is opposed to military : Suff. fr i Catarrh , , suffer from Catarrh | Q UIT Ql JICK! | menweaith ‘ts: something entirely dit training and to a. standing army, not points come to men who are constantly = 7 in touch with outside circles, and men; who know what current events mean in thé world of finance, © ferent from the representative repud-| because he ig’ supremely a lover ‘of td m . 3 lic. It ig something entirely déverent| Peace, but because he knows that| But You Must Drive:It Out of in constant use ‘for. over filty years,» from even a pire democracy. They}when he starts his revolution ‘forthe Your Bi to Get Rid'ci It * wil ive ihe satarrhal Bolsons ‘out y 2 © . | of your blood, purifying and strength= Our officials may be able to help you. They are at your disposal. Two. Drops of “Gets.It” Will Do It./declare: “Under Socialism we work- overthrow of the present order, and | r , ‘1 ers will not be subjects of any state|the present civilization, the soldier Permanently. ening; it, so it. will: carry” vigor and , Ever hand-carve your toe with aJor union, but we will be citizens, free| Will stand in his.way. While: prepaz- You have'probably been in, the habit ac ee arr metnlicanes on “Th Fri dl B ” rf eas y hrough your body an e rien ly an knife trying to gei rid of a corn?| citizens, in the industries in which ‘we | ing. for his sweeping changes, the So- hogs 5 : a Ever use ecissors aud snip off part'are employed: “* *-* More than|clalist. is preparing. his program ‘to of applying jexternal treatments, try-| nature will soon restore you to health. © fthe corn too clos» to the quick?, that, under Socialism, we will have tio eliminate effective ‘opposition, "| NB to cure You' will be relieved of the droppings | congresses such as exist today, nor| Having thus cleared the way, the used ‘sprays, 4 of, mucous ‘in your throat, sores in legislature, nor parliaments, nor coun: neat step in ‘the Hotallat program, ac-| possibly ¢ beenvate: Hate bad breath, hawking and spit- ils i ties.” :| cording to. the national platform, is ‘ ¢ y Naas x cils of munidipalities.” “True: Social uA ny But after Ort tinje you‘ had<an-} All reputable druggists carry S, S.'S. BISMARCK BANK ism,” says Mr, Macy in his Socialism] the “collective ownership and demo- ‘ Wee: eal Ps in America, “is anti-governmental, an-|cratic management of railroads, tele- other, atte aia : ae in sidck sand we recommend you give ‘ ti-governmental, ‘anti-patriotic, anti-na-| graphs, telephones and all other social mat ote 4 infecs pitia tr immediately: 2 tionalist, and antl-militarist. At- bot-{ means» of transportation and» of all t’ relief ; per medical adviser of the tom, these ‘antis’ are one and: ‘the| large-scale industries.” mite nt reliek infection | Company will cheerfully answer all: let i s must be drives sblood.- The | ters on the subject. There'is no charge quicker you come sunderstand this,|-for the medical advice. Address Swift the quicker “you” will get: it out’ of | Specific Company, 251 Swift Labora- your system.’S,S, S.; which.has been | tory,, Atlanta, Ga. same thing; they: can:not be separated Bolshevik Socialism. from each other.’or.:from essential] . In 1912. their national convention Socialism. The most eminent Socfal-| Pronounced. against sabotage - and ists of the last century were avowd| force. This so exasperated the riotous enemies of the state.’ ‘ elements that they set to’ work to: No Patriotism. capture the party and they have suc-| These quotations’ show’ how. the, So-| ceeded* They drove out the advocates cialist feels .adout::the: state—about| of legitimate: methods: and, when final- r Feet in Clover Quickly. Ever pack up your toe with “con- s though you traption: nd plasters were packing a gl post? Ever use gr rub off on your st sticky tape that gets jerked off when for parcel you pull your stocking off? Kind oO foolish, when 2 or 3 drops of “C Jt” on any corn or quick, painless, It” stops corn pa mile and dar even with It’s the common-sense simple, y—peels cor a banan 1. Used by m It never fa It,” the guaranteed, mone; back corn-remover, the only sure way, costs but a trifle at any drug store, M'’d by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago, Il. Sold in Bismarck ommended as the worl remedy by Finney’s Drug Breslow. R. T. BURKE LAWYER Tribune Block Bismarck, N. D Phone 752. Bismarck Clearing House Association C. B. LITTLE, President E. V. LAHR, Vice Pres. B. C. MARKS, Secy.-Mgr. MEMBERS First National Bank City National Bank Capital Security Bank First Guaranty Bank Exide’. ORY. service STATIS The Oldest and Largest Bank in this section of the State ointments that ing? Ever use peaceful, dead-sure | funeral! Why putter and suffer? it lets you Drug Store, Lenhart Drug o., IG any state‘or country. He has no Jove for it,:no patriotism. 1 -introduce this right here because it comes in place, but I shall enlarge upon it later... To him the international~’ brotherhood with its red flag means more than America, with -its stars and_ stripes. Above this banier he puts the red flag. His supreme allégiancé is to the Socialist of the world, the ulti- mate aim for which he works and votes is to destroy the republic which has given him the rights of a man and a field for their exercise; and to build upon its ruins an undefined something of Socialists, for Socialists and by Socialists. I say this not to place political Socialish in a false light; I say it because they say it, be- se they proclaim their platforms dl glory in the proclamation. When railroad magnate sécures control of rtain line of road and then wrecks it for. his own profit, the Socialist fills the air with fumes of brimstone. When @ Socialist gains possession, of the hinery of government: that « he may wreck or change it for the benefit of himself and his class or party, he reaches the sumit of political and in- dustrial virtue! Seize the Farms. It is hard for the loser to look with complacency upon the man who wins. He may lose by his own fault, but that does not change his attitude. I clipped this item from a labor paper in Minneapolis: “Not long since a Socialist orator, addressing a little group of his com- patriots at a small station in North Dakota, said: ‘Look at these rich farmers in their automobiles. Who made them rich? We laborers did! What made made theni rich? Getting more than their share in the deal! Here we work'for four dollars a day when ten would not be enough, Twen- ty-five dollars a day for us would not be our full share,’ This illustrates the attitude, There are some causes of vice and misery that go down so deep that no exter- nal arrangement can cure them. To say that Socialism or any other sys- tem can do it, is to exhort the farmer to build a new fence around his fields in order to improve the quality of his sail and secure better harvests. Following is the latest amendment to the constitution of the Socialist party: “Article II, Section 7—Any member fof thé Socialist party,’ elected to an office, who shall in an yway ‘vote to appropriate moneys for military or naval purposes or war shall be ex- pelled from the party.” This is ‘why the political Socialist is not atid cannot be patriotic; why he will not sustain his country in war; Even though the war is over it is just as im- portant for you to econo- mize as it has always been. The practical way to get the benefit of sys- tematic economy is to open a Savings Account in this bank and add to it regularly. You can open an ac- count with any sum from One Dollar up and your money will earn 4% in- terest, compounded quar- terly. Come in and get. ac- quainted when next in our neighborhood, Established 1879 ‘fied and. the Bolsheviki. Our own city: 'They are ready to reduceititis country ly they: passed their treasonable reso- lutions: at St. Louis, the, last vestiges of order and loyalty had disappeared from ‘the’ party. ' John; Spargo says: “From the early days of the war, the Socialist party has in actual prac- tice been committed to a program es- sentially: unneutral. un-American and pro-Germa n, * * * Through — the utteranes and actions of the national executive committee, the national committee and. our precs, the «party has been placed in the position of favoring precisely the things which the German foreign office desired and of opposing the things which: the German foreign. office opposed. We have repeated all the miserable eva- sions and apologies of German states men and: have been silent upon those questions on which thé German inter: ests required silence.” Thus it comes to pass that the So- clalist party has gathered to itself all ine elements’ of jawlessriess und’ dis- order. in'the land; the I: W. W., the. pro-Gernian ‘propagandists, the radical trade. unionists,. the syndicalists, the traitors, the seditionists, the, dissatis- is one of the’ principal headquarters of the 1. W. Wi—11,000 being regis- tered for the district for which Min- neapolis forms the ‘center. .We have the Bolsheviki also in Minneapolis. 1! am told that already two “soviets” have been formed. They are preach ing Bolshevik Socialism every Sunday at 10:30 on Western avenue, where a lectureship. has been,\éatablished. to the condition of. Russia and -are trying to do it. The “American Bol- shevik” has recently appeared on our streets. From the earliest day of the Social- ist theories, the accepted views of marriage and of the family have been repudiated in favor of “free unions founded upon elective affinity.” Bebel says: “Marriage, standing as it does in the most intimate connection to prop- erty and the right of inheritance, de- mands ‘legitimate’ children as heirs. It is entered into for the purpose of} obtaining them, and the pressure exer- cised by society has enabled the rul- ing classes to enforce it in the case of those who’ have nothing to be- queath. But as in the new communi- ty there will be nothing to bequeath * % * compulséry; marriage be- comes unnecessary from this stand- point as well as from all others.” These theories have recently been enacted into law by certain of the Bolshevik governments of Russia. \f This Were Your Wife? The following is a translation of a decree by the New Europe, issued by the Bolsheviks of Vladimir and pub- tished in the official soviet organ, Izvestija: ‘‘A girl having reached her eighteenth year is to be announced ag) the property of the state. Any girl having reached her eighteenth year and not having martied‘is obliged subject to the most severe peraltY to register at the bureau of free love in the commissariat of surveitlance. Having registered. at the ‘burea wof free’ love shé' has the right to choose of 19 and 650 a cohabitant husband. Remarks: (1) The consent of tne men in the said choice is not neces- sary; (2) The man on whom such @ choice falls has no right to make any protest whatsoever against, the ar- rangement. The right to choose from a number of girls who havé” reached their eighteenth year is given also to the men, The opportunity to choose & husbahd o rwife is to be presented once: a month. Men between the ages of 19 and 50 have the right to choose from among the -registered women even without the consent of the latter, in the interests of the state. Children: who are the issue of’ these unions are to becomé thé property: of the’ state.” This conception* ef mar- riage is therefore, likely. to form a feature of the Socialist state: Another feature of the co-operative commonwealth will be ‘the subordina- tion of the individual to the mass. The Community Machine. Socialism proceeds upon the as- sumption that it is possible: to’ ‘con- vert the entire community itto’a huge machine, and that every -dian and woman ‘will take his or/her place jin that machine, just as the Wheels and pistons and other parts of.an engine dg; and that éach part’ will work in harmony with every other part with out friction, But alas! ~ ‘The facts-of human nature are all against it. If aa: from ‘alnong men. between the: ages |, 9 Solid comfort! I'll say so, Your: pleasant pomnanien” Beco ‘Seething and bubbling in the glass. Different! A fatigue chaser. Makes you forget your hard day’s work. setter! Ask any man who drinks or sells it—at Cafes, Soda Fountains, Buffets, etc. Satisfies! _ Just try it. amu, PS°y St. Paul, Minn, =— = wat My 4 " apt - es men Were themselves machines, this might be done, But they are not.” It BISMARCK GRO en pM . ate ah ayaa Cea