The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 20, 1919, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIB Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter, GEORGE D. MANN, iM Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, = : - Editor CHICAGO, - - - DETROIT, Marquette Bldg. - - - Kresge Bidg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK, - : - Fifth Ave, Bldg. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS’ The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise eredited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of pubsication of speciat dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUR SUBSCRIPTION RA Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per y Daily by mail, per year (In state outside Bismarck) 5. Daily by mail, outside of North D. 6. 7 eST NEWSPAPER Ot Ov THE STATE'S OL JUDGE NUESSLE, AMAN | Great moments reveal great characters. Had Judge W. L. Nuessle been more a politician and less a man he would not have ruled as he did yesterday in the case of democracy versus Lynn J. Frazier, dictator of North Dakota. Had Judge Nuessle thought alone for his im- mediate political future, he would have evaded the 7 Bis TEN | . A : f(a Bem (s|and the laws of their commonwealths as is the NOT PARALLEL CASES ° Much as Governor Frazier likes to pose as a radical leader, a statesman who is not “a slave to precedent,” he is anxious to justify his ruthless confiscation of private property in North Dakota by representing that the governors of Ohio and still exist, have done the same thing. Mr. Frazier may be sincere in this contention, but he is not correct. Governor Cox of Ohio and Governor Allen of Kansas have not stepped in with martial law as a bludgeon and by force of arms and without due process of law compelled | private citizens to deliver over their private prop- erty. Governors Cox and Allen recognized the tact that, although chief executives of their states, they were fully as amenable to the constitutions humblest citizen. Instead of setting aside the constitutions and the laws of their states and in- stead of declaring themselves superior to these legal bulwarks, they made of them an instrument to accomplish their' ends. el Governors Cox and Allen did as Governor Frazier might have done, and should have done, did he think the emergency necessitated it and were he sincere in his belief that the state must intervene between its citizens and a possible coal famine. They applied to the courts; they repre- sented that the mines were not operating and that their owners were apparently unable to operate Kansas, commonwealths in which law and order BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE Use Pyramid for Piles Then You Will Learn What Solid Comfort In, If In Doubt, Send for a Free Trial. bleeding or protruding piles often. come without warning and everyone should Know of Pyra- mid Pile 'T: ment. If you are Itching, There Is Nothing More Gratefut ‘Than the Relief From Pile:, now suffering, free trial or £0 to the ne either gist for a 60 cent bo « for Pyramid Pile Treatment and take no substitute. Fill out this coupon and mall it for a free trial, FREE SAMPLE COUPO?: PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, 680 Pyramid Bldg., Marshall, Mlci. Kindly send me a Free “samnle of Pyramid Pile Treatment, in plain wrapper. The Current Events club held its issue to begin with by declining to enter an order|them. They contended, therefore, that these prop-|reguiar meeting yesterday at the home directing Mr. Frazier’s servants to show cause why they should’remain in possession of private property unlawfully seized by them. Because, the real politician thinks not very far ahead. He caters to the mob, to the majority of the moment, trusting to his ability to trim sail to catch the breeze which may blow from another direction the morrow! And with the radical ele- erties were in a state of bankruptcy, and they asked and secured the appointment of temporary receivers, through which the states will reopen the mines and} operate them by authority of the commonwealths until the operators and miners shall have reached an agreement. And the owners are assured a just compensation. By so doing Cox and Allen did what Frazier has ment, which talks loudest and longest'and which, |not done—they protected and preserved private though a meager minority, in point of noise may |Property rights. Through his action in this state appear a magnificent majority, the action of Governor Frazier has jeopardized all private prop- Mr. Frazier in seizing North Dakota’s coal mines|erty rights. He has used force in the seizure of has been popular. oa 2 AR | property which did not belong to him, and he has The Tribune does not believe that politics or|come into possession of it just as unlawfully as thought of political preferment, present or future, | though he had taken a blackjack and lain in wait entered Judge Nuessle’s mind in the case of democracy versus Lynn J. Frazier, military dicta- tor of North Dakota. Judge Nuessle presents a splendid type of the judicial mind. He possesses to a degree seldom seen in these unregenerate days ability to immolate self, to subjugate person- ality, and to ponder dispassionately, without pre- judice. and bias, the questions of law and fact which are presented to him as the instrument of justice to adjudicate. In Judge Nuessle are embodied attributes which are rare, even in men who have been so honored by the faith and confidence of their fellow men as Judge Nuessle has been. Because he is consti- tuted as he is, to decide as he did yesterday cost him no personal struggle, although he doubtless did bleed for the travail which his decision may bring North Dakota before our long-suffering state shall have purged itself of the disease which brought to a court of the state the necessity of overruling the chief of our executive department in order that the constitution and the laws and the right to life, liberty and property which he had sworn his solemn oath to uphold might not be set at naught. Government is a development of civilization. It is a confession of weakness. Governments are! designed to give stability to organized society, be- cause the best and the sanest and the wisest of us have recognized the fact that there are times when an intelligent people may be swept off their feet by the whim of a moment; that there arise in the lives of all of us crises when we must be saved from our own mad blunders. Laws, executives, courts, the whole system of government, are devised to protect us from our- selves; to give us time to think; to provide for us an orderly, deliberate plan of progress. Our laws are often made by politicians who yield to the passing clamor of the mob. These laws are fre- quently executed, by demagogues who use the statutes to further their own little ambitions. Our last resorts in these cases are the constitu- tion which our forefathers in their far-seeing wis- dom gave us, and the integrity of our courts, about which we have in, our sane moments endeavored to throw every safeguard. Judge Nuessle may be crucified today by the radicals who saw in Mr. Frazier’s indifference to law and civil rights advancement of ambitions based on mad and untried theories. Tomorrow, we firmly, believe, these radicals, their sanity re- gained, will join with those whom they today con- demn as reactionaries in thanking their God that in this crisis, more calamitous than any our na- tion has been called upon to face since it was born 143 years ago, Burleigh county had on its bench aman, a patriot, and, if necessity demand, a martyr to the cause of lasting liberty. Because, and do not forget this, you who hold to socialism, once let a man establish, as Mr. Frazier has sought to do, the right of any in- dividual to raise himself above the laws and the constitution ; once let us supinely submit, as Mr. Frazier has expected us to, to the suppression of the courts and'the abrogation of all civil rights; once let us endure unresisting a military dictator- ship, and we will have set the hands of time back five hundred years, we will have returned our world to the dark ages which preceded the revolt of the princes of King John and the Magna Charta, and we will have relinquished all the liberties and all the rights and all the priviléges of freemen which our ancestors have fought for and died for in all these centuries. If you doubt this, look upon Russia as it is|some today. ONO NE | ne renne TS Oo ea eae at some dark corner to relieve some good citizen of his watch and purse. The governor could, with a little more use of his imagination, have found as much justification for this act as he can pos- sibly show for his confiscation of-the private property of the mining operators. Gompers accused coal mine operators of various sins, and the operators have replied the shorter and uglier in every detail. The more hard words, the less soft coal. Oe ee eee WITH THE EDITORS | | __ WITH THE EDITORS | TIME FOR SOME HANGINGS Haven’t we tolerated such human vermin as the I. W. W. and the American Bolshevists about long enough? * Haven’t we compromised with them, truckled to them, and been bluffed by them about long enough? Haven’t we permitted a few hundred crazy radicals to-terrorize this country. about long enough? Surely the outrage at Centralia, Wash., where four members of the American legion were shot down in cold blood while they were marching in an Armistice day parade, will be all the excuse that is necessary for making a clean sweep of the rats now. The I. W. W. and the Bolshevist, like the Prus- sian, do not understand any argument but force. They preach “direct action,” and they can’t be subdued by anything but “direct action.” For- tunately, it is possible to take “direct action” against them that is legal action. “Russia for he Russians ought to be our motto in dealing with the foreign-born among these fanatics. Most of them are Russians, and the quickest way to dispose of them is to deport them to Russial and et them learn at first hand some of the delights of the Bolshevist rule they preach, For the others, Leavenworth ora gallows would seem to fit the case, And right here in Fargo we have a newspaper hat openly encourages the preaching of I. W. W. doctrines, and repeatedly expresses its sympathy or Bolshevism and the Bolshevist rulers. The Centralia crime is the logical result of just such propaganda as we get every morning in Fargo. Moreover, the man who dictated the legislation or the Nonpartisan’ league at Bismarck was the man who wrote to Bill Haywood, chief of this gang of murderers, the famous “Dear Fellow Worker” letter. In what respect was he a “fellow worker”? Was he also a “fellow worker” with the cowardly rats who opened fire on the service men of Centralia? The outrage at Centralia surely should bring a show-down. Either you are with the American legion or you are with the I. W. W. Either you are an American or a traitor. It is no longer possible to straddle the issue, and preach tolerance of I. W. W. doctrines. The I. W. W. and Bolshevists are the worst enemies of organized labor; the worst enemies of America; the worst enemies civilization has, They seek nothing but the right to loot, murder and rape. They want to bring about the downfall of or- ganized society and organized government, go that they may give free play to their lowest passions. They are simply organized crime, and the Cen- tralia outrage shows that the time has come for hangings—legal ones, of course—Fargo eo) ee rae “ ha a of Mrs. George BE, Walla B. The program topic: w tion,” and Miss Nellie FE ead paper on “Educational Progress” and Mrs. Wallace spoke on the mining and agricultural resources of North Dako- ta. The next meeting will be held De- cember 3. Let’s go to JOHNSON’S for Hosiery. BEAUTY SECRETS! Whereshe gets her good looks, her heal « el thy skin, her pink checks, is 421 Avenue duca- known to every one, because it is apparent that it is not due to cosmetics, paint and powder. But the true womanly beauty comes from good health, and this good health is a woman’s preret. Gealth comes with good phys- ical machinery and good spirits, an active digestion. A body free from pains and aches comes with & tonic known for over fifty years as the best “temperance” tonic and pervine for woman—namely, «Dr. Prerce’s Favorite Prescription. “t can be obtained in any drug ‘store in liquid cr tablet form, cr send 10c to Dr. Pierce Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N.Y. Cleansing of the intestinal tract is important. Take castor oil or select a vegetable pill. Such a one is composed of May-apple, leaves of aloe, root of jalap, and made into tiny sugar-coated pel- lets, to be had at every drug store as D.,. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. RUBY LADIES Concert and Dance Orchestra Singing and playing all the latest song and dance hits of the season. Music Furnished-For All Occasions FOR ENGAGEMENTS Phone 327 or Write P. 0. Box 137 Bismarck, North Dakota Ruby Leen Flinn, Manager FOR SALE 1,000 tons of good upland hay. Will be baled and ready for shipment in about 30 days. ; Write O. G. Crook McKenzie, N. D. ° MOTHERS aad We can save you money. No doubt your husband has an old suit or overcoat which is past his’ use—so bring your garments and we will make the little boy or girl a suit, overcoat: or coat from this... material. Come in—let’s talk it over. KLEIN. ; Tailor and Cleaner . AMY ELLERMAN | AT AUDITORIUM | NEXT TUESDAY) | famous | Miss Amy ‘Everman, the contralto Who Will appear ata concert here’ next wedk, is noted among her many friends pd admirers i she is. thoroughly “self-made girl typical of the great Mid-West ¢ nd a who know her ible not to fall in love with he ght, Her remarkable character is as winning as her fine yoice, : Born and raised on her father’s! near Yankton, S. D, at three | J 3 Of age she was so completely at! home on the back of a horse she would ask to be put on the wildest bronchos and would outgallop her father in rounding up the herds. Before she had reached her teens she could cast a lariat apd throw a steer as intrepidly and neatly as the best of the cowboys. She could also be ag quick with a pistol and deadly with a rifle as fhe coolest and oldest hand. , Her unusual independence of char- acter became evident equally — early. She always preferred boy’s clothing and dressed as a girl only at home in the evening or when visiting. Rather than accept “pin money” without,earn- ing it she obtained all the money she needed by following the huskers dur- ing harvest and selling her gleanings to her father at so much a bushel, One of her greatest pleasures now outside of her music, is to return for 1 n yacation to the old ranch life and dressed ‘us a man, put in a spell ar broncho busting or, with big hip.boots on, go duck hunting, The Fleming Sisters ‘Trio appear jointly with Miss Amy Ellerman at Tuesday's ‘concert at the Auditorium. TEA FOR THREE Coming to the auditorium on Friday ‘the 28th for one night only is “Tea for Three” the comedy success that has been touring the Western Coast. with great satisfaction according to reviewers reports. “Tea for Three” was written by Roi Cooper Megrue, author of “It Pays to Advertise,” “Seven Chances,” “Under Cover” and other popular plays and was offered | for the first time in September 1918 at Maxine Elliott’s, Theatre, New York, where it remained until June of this year. It is said to be decidedly original and clever, particularly as to dialogue, It is in three acts and a prologue. The company to be seen here is headed by Norman Hackett and includes Mildred Evans Hayden Stevenson, S. Sydney Chon and Marie. Newkirk. The production is by The Selwyns, Columbia Phonographs Columbia Records ON EASY TERMS WHEN DESIRED ‘ COWAN’S DRUG STORE Rc cccem ete erent ete ty Hopeless Diseases Cannot Bé Cured By Doctors or Medicine There are some diseases which are absolutely hopeléss and past cure by any physician or medicine, but they may yet be palliated and a medicine. if it can not help in one case, it may help in another, To any one suffering from a disease a remission is a de- gree of health and a medicine that relieves or palliates a disease igs of great benefit. We cannbt guarantee to cure any disease with Number 40 |For . The: Blood, but we quote word for word what the ingredients in 40 are recommended for in the U, 8. 'Dispensatory and New American Ma- teria Medica. In the treatment of jblood troubles. an acknowledged rem: @ ae edy among all schools of physicians, removes the cause of disease and stimulates the removal of waste, thus indirectly encouraging nutrition.’ Dis- orders of the neryous system demand { this remedy, such as neuralglas, chronic rheumatism, gouty — condi- tions, mainutrition, anto-toxication, pation. Used with phenomenal success in eczema and Skin diseases, lumbago, gladular swellings, ulcer- {ations of mucous membranes and in |Seneral disorders of the stomach, liv- jer kidneys and spleen. Prepared by \5. C. Mendenhall, Evansville, Ind. 40 years a druggist. Sold by Joseph ive | Breslow. =———————— —ooooaaa— Burleigh, County Chapter of the Red | Cross has’ ‘some: excellent sock and sweater .yarh which it is offering at re- duced rates as long as the supply lasts. Calk at-room 360 federal building. (tf) Ponselle in With Maurel “Abide With this world-famous: sacred even more millions love it. imploring words ring true der, thrilling tones, y Esp: COLUMBIA GRAFONOLAS 3tandard Models up to$300 Period Designs up to $2100 Rosa Ponselle, greatd#amatic soprano of the Metropolitan Opera Company, in a duet with Barbara Maurel, sings many millions love, in a way to make New December Numbers of e all of his ecstacy at ‘Paradise, and fairly Duet ' Sings Me” song, which The solemn, in their ten- 78557—$1.50 f on : ‘= \ ae ao - “Danse Bacchanale” by Symphony A superb piece of ballet music is this wild Oriental dance from Saint-Saéns’ Samson and~ Delilah rendered by the Paris Conservatory: Symphony Orchestra. ‘Rapid and fiery, it fore- shadows the destruction of the revelers in the Temple of Dagon. Coupled with “Capriccio A-6122—$1.50 ‘rench agnol.” And 37 Other Great Selections The 41 new Columbia selections for December include 2 Grand Opera arias, 8 popular song jhits, 5 Christmas hymns, 4 tenor duets, 2 violin solos, 2 symphony orchestra selections, 2 Gypsy orchestra selections, 2 character duets, 2 children’s orchestra selections, 2 quartettes, and ten dances, comprising 6 fox-trots, 2 one-steps and 2 waltzes, Get the new Columbia Novelty Record Booklet, Every Columbia dealer bas it. New Columbia Records on Sale the 10th and 20th of Every Month. COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE COMPANY, New York .. Charles Hackett Sings O Paradiso from "LAfricaine’ As the young. naval officer in L’Africaine, Charles Hackett, the sensational new tenor of the Metropolitan Opera’ Company, conveys which he has discovered. He sings of*it as a the beauty of the new land makes you see it. 49623—$1.50

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