The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 6, 1920, Page 4

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4 y THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., a« Second Class Matter, GEORGE BD. MANN, — - = ¢ 3 Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, GHICAGO, - - - - DETROIT, “‘darquette Bldg. : - - Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK, - - - Fifth Ave. Bidg. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Assuciated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited to it’ or not otherwise credited in this paper and ulso tue lucal news published herein. All rights of pubsication of specia: dispatches hereim are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIMCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year + $7.20 pally fa mail, per year (In Bismarck) . 1B uily by mail, per year (1n state outside Bismarck) 5.0% Daily by mail, outside qf North Dakota........ 0% THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ve : 3 = SOME PERTINENT QUESTIONS “Are they afraid to allow the attorney general, elected by you farmers, and his assistants to prosecute the cases against the railroad com- Editor panies? Or, my friends, is it because the old po-' litical bosses are back on the job, using what pull and influence they have to put over what they can?” ‘ This is a question Attorney General Langer asked the.cmbattled farmers at Portland last week. The Tribune asks it of President A. C. Townley. Why should a man whose shibboleth is “Big Business” put on his payroll so many agents of Big Business? Iyit merely an acknowledgment that the league must, if it‘expects to win, avail itself of Big Busi- ness cfficiency, and, perhaps, of some of the methods of Big Business of which a certain few of those with whom Townley has surrounded him- self. are past masters? If we were a farmer who had parted with $100 for a Consumers’ Store certificate, and with $50 more, or thereabouts, in dues to the Nonpartisan league, and if we were about to be asked to. put up an additional $18 to finance this organization another year, these are some questions we would ask.Mr. Townley. Of course, it is barely possible that the old bosses really have been born anew; and that they have been washed whiter than snow in the dews. of the morn of the New Day, and if this is a fact surely it would furnish interesting reading for, their’ old-time ‘friends and consolation for the Why not, Mr. Townley, provide us with a little. interesting entertainment? | _\ THIS IS A DRY YEAR This ‘is a dry year. _. We might as well reconcile ourselves to that fact, und the sooner we readjust our appetites and , our’ aversions: the happier we will all be. _ A-train‘of deaths extending from one coast to _ the‘other has been the penalty paid by those who ~ could not'or would not leave IT alone, and who ac- cepted the vile substitutes offered in an effort to evade the law. Providence was merciful to them, * for there are still others who will poison their charged ten cents for a dish of carefully counted, stomachs with stuff less prompt and cqually deadly in its action, and for them there is a living’ But that isn’t the price the family pays. A’ few. prunes a day, and keep the doctor away, is goo | imedicine. They are fresh now, and each one ig; ment. And, in connection. with thiv @eath far more horrible than the quick release which came to them who quaffed wood alcohol. Those whc' have made the readjustment would _not if they could return to the old ways. Clearer, “brains, steadier hands, better tempers, a more wholesome home life and greater prosperity and progress have been their reward. Surely these things are as much worth while * as the few hours of empty hilarity and the morn- ing-after headache which’ was, if we stop to. an- alyze, the inevitable best that alcohol had to offer us. 3 STRENGTHEN HIS ARM Every loyal American, every sane, normal hu- man being in America, will respond to the call of 3 Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer for legisla- tion which will reach the parlor Bolshevists, the *: long-haired men ‘and short-haired women who: |4 Vacuausly rant of sedition and who,dabble in an- archy and other isms as a spur to nerves and +; / Senses jaded by a neurotic, useless life. A majority of these strange creatures belong to he idle rich; not one in ten thousand jis a pro- ducer; notyone in ten thousand has ‘ever done a single day’s creative work or is capable of it. Yet these perverted humans gather together in col- onies, in dismal basements or fantastic lofts in our large cities, thereto concoct the poisonous mental doses which’ red-blooded, men and women, mor credulous than they should be, absorb, and which’ the first thus honored. produce dangerous reactions. « The parlor Bolshevist himself is not to be feared. He will never be found leading an attack- ing party of revolutionists; "tis not he who will hurl the bomb, or who will fabricate it. But the parlor Socialist is a red menace because the fer- »., ment.which is thrown off by his futilely seething - brain intoxicates others and incites them to do the nt deeds of which long-haired men and women merely dream to pass the time away. 2|. If there waa a real revelution in this countr tif our masses, as these amateur Bolshevists so i aptly call them, ever should become thoroughly +-faroused, these animated vacuums would be the #i/ first to be annihilated, and that would-be-a genuine soihlgpsing But-mobs-teach-us that when the pack - always comes a time, as it has come in Russia and BISMARCK: DAILY TRIBUNE is intent upon its kill it uses no judgment. There to a lesser degree in Germany and Austria and |Hungary, when the mob kills for the very joy of killing; when it becomes drunk with blood. And it is,such a horror that these parlor Bolshevists would fasten upon’ this clean-spirited, peaceful ‘land of ours. The very least that congress can do in justice to| ithem and to the country is to confine them in a ‘mad house. Far less harmful is the murderous ‘lunatic who is so incarcerated for his own and the country’s good, for at most his victims are few, while these mad men and women, ignorant of: life, never having lived; never having known the pul- sation of warm blood through throbbing veins or the surge of vital ambition which actuates men and women who are genuine, would vicariously slay by tens of thousands. Too long have they been allowed through their silly. teachings to kill in others those sterling qual- hood which these parlor Bolshevists never have possessed. America is awake; Americans demand action. If congress makes of Attorney General Palmer’s plea another such political football as the ipeace treaty has become it‘ will arouse a storm which will sweep from public life forever the demagogues -and trimmers and weaklings who dare place their own personal ambitions, their lust for power or their cowardly fears above the will of an outraged public. ; The Tribune urges that Americans in North Dakota who are aware of the conditions which con- front us in this state and in the nation write-or| wire their representatives and their senators at Washington, demanding that there be laid aside everything else and that congress apply itself to providing our department of justice with the ma- |chinery which it lacks. | It is of no avail to talk of social justice, of the amelioration of working conditions, of industrial, peace and of reconciliation and reconstruction | while these enemies of all humanity are allowed! to continue to distill their poson. For these fu- jturists and cubists of society can distort the fair- est picture. to square with their own diseased |Views; they can paint white black and'so present ‘it to a certain proportion of our people that they’ will see naught but the slime and grime with which these parlor Bolshevists haye besmirched the pure canvas. : Either they, or America, must go, and we be- lieve there still exist in this glorious land of ours at least a majority of patriots who will not see | America perish without an effort. ities of citizenship ,and fatherhood and mother-|. ? 7 ‘¢ PEOPLE’S FORUM | on. a .o “ ABUSE OF GARNISHEE LAW, Beulah, N. D.. Jan, 5, "There. is one practice, prevalent in some communities and I, presume gen- erally, to a varying extent, throughout | the state, which, In certain classes of ‘eases (in the hands of. unscrupulous practitioners), has become an abomt- nation. scriminate garnisheeing 's wages. Of course we all realize that nearly THE FAITHFUL PRUNE We depend large on, California for our prunes. The new crop is in. And, down atthe grocery store, we find them blue-black, fat and sassy, ‘loaded with sunshine transformed into ‘sugar. ing + Prunes are a health food. Any physician will tell you so. And, comparatively, they are cheap. Time was. when a quarter would purchase more of them than an ordinary family would use in a week or so, Not so now, as any housewlife knows, But all things considered they are as economical fruit food as can be bought. Of course, there are restaurants where one is prunes—one, two, three, four and a dash of juice. loaded with health tonic. i They might compromise that navy row by giv. ing the seamen distinguished service medals ané: the land men ‘distinguished desk medals, If Italy makes conditions verse for d’Annunzio, the will sogn be willing to meter half way. —_—— ‘ | __ WITH THE EDITO | eS ! SAGAS ON THE SCREEN Though Harald the Fairhaired was a leader of rare imagination, it could never have occurred to him, when he won the battle of Hafrsfjord and deported all obstreperous Norwegians to Iceland, that 1,047 years later ‘an ‘enterprising film com- pany would bq sending a party to the same cold jShores to take pictures of Icelandic scenery asa preliminary step to placing the venerable sagas on the ser¢en. Yet this is what has happened. . The Islendingasogur are at last triumphant. No longer will they merely sleep between their vellum covers in the stout vaults of royal libraries or be brought forth in pieces to make graduate students doubt the wisdom of higher education. They are to be een in the movies. The “Njaal’s Saga” is to be The jchoice was most happy, for as a scenario the story of Njaal leaves nothing out. He was a good man who had infinite trouble with’ his neighbors, and that in a country where the camera can reap an abundant harvest. On the coast-land hills and fjords altternate with perfect regularity. Further in there are countless Delawares for Washingtons to cross. Still further there are diminutive plains—the reel can make them seem vast—across which the caravan can‘move with cumulative dignity. Around and over it all the natives go about their tasks with as little concern for the unrest of other latitudes as they had a thousand years ago=-until we vome to Reykjavik, which is as modern as Oklahoma:—The New York mal ning Post. . {thattels or ‘realty of, the debtor “Ffendant, to Ge held subject to the de- all. money claimed due js justly due ‘and should be paid. Therefere, lawyers THAT Gives ME THE Fiocets “absolute | exemptions things p ‘ly not to be touched by the creditor, Then i further, they haye. in man, Mowed “addi- tional ex: 1 ist of “goods, chattels, merchand money or other personal property. uot to ex-/ coed, In the agregate, $1000 In value” These additional exemptions are ‘only ; made so by a stipulated action on the ing, ete. as or i to, then debtor. s a third one. a value on the articles of $1,000,000. Th by his agent or attorney, file a schedule or Jist of all his personal preperty with the court in whieh Ge action is pending, This must be sw cts one apprai the creditor’ selects one und these two After the appraisers set n the debtor may Select enough to’ reach a tot) value became. exempt. part of the debtor, Who must, himself, | | You May Find are loath, a8 a, rule, to ‘defend gar- { nishment actions, These very — fi have been instrumental in inducing | sto make a ‘practice of taking ints for collection and garnishee- ht and: left regord'es justice, merit or ¢ircums j mony instances heaping unfair ytigma j and expenses upon: persons who were _Feallv struggling to settle up. and would, probably. have accemplished it ,; Soon without’ the intervention of the pettifoging- azent of the creditor—the Jewal light who burns with avarice and who wants that attorney fee. he | ereditors are. usually, not so -oppres- sive as these reptiles who urge then. | cn to bring sult. Our legislators have thought it wise. (in fact. as a matter of encouragement ) of commerce necessary, to. safeguard reditors by giving them a right: of ton whereby’ to force payment— suing on accounts and obtaining judy | shyst fas a matter of provisional security have formulated: and allowed a pro- ceeding termed ‘wttachmen ne form of which is called gatnis t. “(In attachment In the: first and com- mon signification of the word, an offt- cer takes possession of some xoods,’ dle- elsion or judgment of the court in which the principal action the suit on the asserted debt ts brought. This attachment is, in fact. a separate action called a “mesne precess” (pro- nounced ‘mean and meaning interven- ing: or ip the nreantine, that is until jthe principal action” iy concluded). Black’s law dictionary says of attach- ment: “To arrest a fund in the hands of'a third person who come lia- ble to pay it over.” , This. is, garnt: ment, ‘ ! ‘ Now, while:the legislators have done this, they have also considered. it. sa- gacious poliey to enact corres- pending. . balancing Jaws : to. pro- tect debtors, but more -especlat- Jy their’, families, so. that: they will not be Heft destitute, either to suffer, deprivation. or to. become public burdens. They have done’ this’ in sev- eral wa. mptton Jaws.” that is, they have specified and listed some things s as fuel, provisions, cloth- ———————— FINE FOR. RHEUMATISM Musterole .Loosens Up Ti.use Stiff Joints—Drives Out Pain You'i know why thousands use Masterole: gree. you expericrc> 4 ie! ives. - s Oat a jar at onze from the nearest Tt is a clean, white oint- with ies oi, of musland Better than a mustard plaster and does not Bite Brings eas, ane comfors ot eit is being ral ee is recommended by man7 doctors and nurses. Millionsof jars are used annually for bronchitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, pleurisy, rheu- matism, lumbago, pains andaches of the back or ere teg ie ‘sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). 22 and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50, Tt In Stocking : | Cincinnati authority says your troublesome corns just loosen and fall off ; prea ee Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or corns between the tocs Just loosen in | iti cases allowed. Nor yet the fact that (This, cf course. ts not detailed, ner do we unduly extend the compositiun, by considering “alternate cxemptions” nor the partial adtitional: exemptions some of. our present cxémption laws are applicable only to debt: tracted since February 26, 1919, ete., ete. The {attempt ts to place the facts pertain- ing to garnishment before the public: in a popular way rather than. to dis- cuss the intricacies and technicalities of law). Section 7738 of the 1919 session laws | says: “In all cases of levy‘ upon per- | sonal property by the sheriff, consta- ble cr other officer, he. must give notice thereof. by copy, to the debtgr” . ete “Said notice must have written or; printed upon its face the further notice their sockets and fall off the next day if. you will apply cirecily upon tae corn a few drops of a, drug called freezone says a Cincinnati authority, You merely put a drop or two ot ithis freezone on the’ tender, touchy cern, today ‘and instantly the corn stops hurting, then<tomorrow some- time. you may ‘find’ the old torturous pest somewhere in your stocking, hav- ing fallen off entirely without ‘a partl- cle of soreness, pain or irritation. The skin surrounding and beneath, the for- mer corn will be as healtby, pink and’ smooth as the palm of your hand. A quarter ounce of freezone is sui- ficient to rid one’s feet of’ every corn sed eallus, and any \ druggist will charge but a few cents for it. It is a to ‘the debtor that if exemptions a claimed or demanded, such claim mus be made within 10 days after service; of notice.” The first notice.is always gi case of garnishment. this “notic an cepy of the garnishment summons. ; But the, second “notice,” which — is equally manda ‘0 be placed upon the face of t is ignored. Now.; this provision is for, the protection of the debtor—defendant and. his —de- pendents. To inform him oft his right tocelaim exemptions..and) it) “would seour, that this reaitrement “must be strictly complied: with, else the who'e proceedine be void and null: It would be. Mogical. inconsistent. te suppose ‘that. our legislature contem- plated protection in cases of one sort The k Way to step a Coug ‘ This home-made syrup dete the work ju a hurry. Easily pre- \ pared, and saves about. $2, You might be surprised to know that the best thing you can use for a severo cough, is a remedy which is easily pre= pared at home in just a few moments. It's cheap, but for. prompt results it beats anything else you ever tried. Usu- ally stops the ordinary cough or chest cold: in 24 ours.’ Tastes pleasant, too— children like it—and it is pure and goou. Pour 2¥% ounces of /Pinex in a pint bottle; them fill it up. with plain pranu- lated sugar syrup. Or use clarified molasses, honey, or corn errup, inslead of sugar syrup, if desired.’ Thus you make a full pint—a family supply—but costing no more than a smail bottle of ready-made cough syrup. And asa cough medicine, there: is really nothing better to be had at any * price. Jt goes right tothe spot and gives quick, lasting relief. 1t promptly heals the igflamed membranes that line the throat ‘and air passages, stops the annoying throat tickle, ens \the phlegm, and soon your co stops en- tirely. Splendid’ for bronchitis, croup, hoarseness and bronchi! asthina. Pinex is ighly. entrated com: i tract, famous rugs qe ecept. anything else. *Guaranteed to give absolute satis- faction ox money refunded, . The, Pinex Co., Ft, Wayne, Ind. ————E—— of attachment-only, What is the dit- attaching, $100 in-cash. ia pos- mn of the debtor, or $100. due him in the possession of a third parly? The reason the notorious dici- {| ples “of Blackstone, whom I. more fully mentioned before, owit: this, seems to be that they are afraid the debtor will become aware. that he has some‘ rights and inyestigate if the. proper notice is glven,. Why courts counteyance tae omission is an enigma. If, the upper ",| courts interpret and construe; the laws in upholding such procedure, it shoul. be’ changed in letter enough to conform | to the intent of the lawmakers. I have no court reports to which to refer to ascertain if, this; suggestion as \| to garnishment’ being but’ a form of at- tachment is brodched here .as a new proposition, or if Jt is denied, or: is established by precedent. Holding thrt garnishment is un entively separate, distinct action: apart from and foreig3 to attachment would afford the ony justification for any court’s ignoriu; the cmission of such, notice as section 7738 demands, = + Even a justice of the peace, should follow—as far as applicable—the codes of our Sovereign state, But Tt noted ‘a case last week, a. gurnishment action, “wherein. the J.P. - contra- yened' the Jaw flagrantly. Refused’ to accept an affidavit as being sufficient which the legislature plainly implied should’ be so xccepted. Issued execu- tlon against earnings , immediately after rendering judgment in face of th+ mandates cf Section 9116, which says “No execution, stiall be 4 upon a judgineftt ‘for ‘the recovery Of “money until after the expiration of 10 days froin. the time of ,entry. of judgment unless” efe. And assessed cost: itis defaulting “defendant “abo is, by law. allowed as fees, .et Suclt: instances mmke .the™ pleod jof yotaries of * fair \deuling, «boll :with wrath, i A Cae Oh, garnishment ! Iglitly used: thou art a business: blessing. |, Bat Hke ‘most good things ‘of earth—preverted, ‘thou * Decomest a curse und many of the ne- farious practices éommitteed under thy name should be crushed while the vam- irish perpetuaturs deserve + chastise: D.-F.. CONE, Beulah, N.D. ‘Woman's Tolerance. A neighbor woman's Sdea of toler ance fs to say with a curlous empha- sis which leaves the Impression that she Is open to- conviction on the, sub- ject: “Oh, well, I don't suppose the girl's actually bad.”—Ohio State Jour- nal. . hat . compound made from ether. EVERETT TRUE JUST BECAUSE YOUR EMPLOYES IDO NOT BELONG TO SOME. [STRONG UNION, YOU NEITHER PAY ATTENTION TO THGIR WRETCHED WORKING AND THAT JREQUGSTS FoR: ImPRdVEMENT ! === “= DON'T You DARE By Condo I HAPPEN ‘WHO SOU ARE You'Re Rest Sasy, £ OLD. GRABBER, S. WwoNn't LAY WT ON WY 1S Mi Because it means skin. Gomfort and skin health. For shaving, bath- ing and shampooing it derful, | Its pore-cleansing, sterilizing prop- erties will prove a revelation to these who use it for the first time. Assisted by. touches of Cuticura Ointment, it doés much to‘ clear ‘ne skin‘of pimples, rashes, eczemas Ried ietirauons andthe scalp of / Iruff anc itching. > Caticura Toilet Trie 5 BUY GOOD.COAL; .- IT 1S THE CHEAPEST Get acquainted with our Black Diamond Coal —the coal .without a fault... We have:a good supply on hand in lump and egg sizes, and will make. deliveries mnt a Wy

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